FINDINGS: Fernandez worked on the mulita (Dasypus hybridus). He was able to get early stages before twinning occurred and show it was preceded by inversion of the germ layers. By the primitive streak stage there were separate embryonic shields and partition of the amnion. There was, however, a single exocoelom and all embryos were enclosed in a common set of membranes comprising chorion towards the attachment site in the uterine fundus and inverted yolk sac on the opposite face. He showed that monozygotic twinning did not occur in another armadillo, the peludo (Chaetophractus villosus).

CONCLUSIONS: Fernández's work represented a major breakthrough in understanding how twinning occurred in armadillos. His work and that of others is of intrinsic interest to zoologists and has a direct bearing on the origin of monozygotic twins and birth defects in humans.},
}
@article {pmid29074157,
year = {2018},
author = {Besser, J and Carleton, HA and Gerner-Smidt, P and Lindsey, RL and Trees, E},
title = {Next-generation sequencing technologies and their application to the study and control of bacterial infections.},
journal = {Clinical microbiology and infection : the official publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases},
volume = {24},
number = {4},
pages = {335-341},
doi = {10.1016/j.cmi.2017.10.013},
pmid = {29074157},
issn = {1469-0691},
support = {CC999999//Intramural CDC HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Bacterial Infections/*diagnosis/*epidemiology ; High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/history/*methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Epidemiology/history/*methods ; },
abstract = {BACKGROUND: With the efficiency and the decreasing cost of next-generation sequencing, the technology is being rapidly introduced into clinical and public health laboratory practice.

AIMS: The historical background and principles of first-, second- and third-generation sequencing are described, as are the characteristics of the most commonly used sequencing instruments.

SOURCES: Peer-reviewed literature, white papers and meeting reports.

CONTENT AND IMPLICATIONS: Next-generation sequencing is a technology that could potentially replace many traditional microbiological workflows, providing clinicians and public health specialists with more actionable information than hitherto achievable. Examples of the clinical and public health uses of the technology are provided. The challenge of comparability of different sequencing platforms is discussed. Finally, the future directions of the technology integrating it with laboratory management and public health surveillance systems, and moving it towards performing sequencing directly from the clinical specimen (metagenomics), could lead to yet another fundamental transformation of clinical diagnostics and public health surveillance.},
}
@article {pmid29310539,
year = {2017},
author = {Creager, ANH},
title = {A Chemical Reaction to the Historiography of Biology.},
journal = {Ambix},
volume = {64},
number = {4},
pages = {343-359},
doi = {10.1080/00026980.2017.1412136},
pmid = {29310539},
issn = {1745-8234},
mesh = {Biological Evolution ; Biology/*history ; Chemistry/*methods ; Genetics/history ; Historiography ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
abstract = {This article examines the often-overlooked role of chemical ideas and practices in the history of modern biology. The first section analyses how the conventional histories of the life sciences have, through the twentieth century, come to focus nearly exclusively on evolutionary theory and genetics, and why this storyline is inadequate. The second section elaborates on what the restricted neo-Darwinian history of biology misses, noting a variety of episodes in the history of biology that relied on developments in - or tools from - chemistry, including an example from the author's own work. The diverse ways in which biologists have used chemical approaches often relate to the concrete, infrastructural side of research; a more inclusive history thus also connects to a historiography of materials and objects in science.},
}
@article {pmid29686077,
year = {2018},
author = {Doctrow, B},
title = {QnAs with Howard Y. Chang.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {115},
number = {19},
pages = {4805-4806},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1805691115},
pmid = {29686077},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Portraits as Topic ; *RNA, Long Noncoding ; },
}
@article {pmid27754860,
year = {2016},
author = {Kinzler, K and Vogelstein, B},
title = {Necessity Is the Mother of Invention: The Development of Digital Genomics.},
journal = {Clinical chemistry},
volume = {62},
number = {12},
pages = {1668-1669},
doi = {10.1373/clinchem.2016.262741},
pmid = {27754860},
issn = {1530-8561},
mesh = {Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Inventions/history ; Polymerase Chain Reaction/*history/methods ; },
}
@article {pmid28352972,
year = {2017},
author = {},
title = {Gerald E. McClearn 1927-2017: A Founding Father of Behavioral Genetics.},
journal = {Behavior genetics},
volume = {47},
number = {3},
pages = {263-264},
doi = {10.1007/s10519-017-9846-2},
pmid = {28352972},
issn = {1573-3297},
mesh = {Genetics, Behavioral/*history/methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid29017033,
year = {2017},
author = {Kolchinsky, EI and Kutschera, U and Hossfeld, U and Levit, GS},
title = {Russia's new Lysenkoism.},
journal = {Current biology : CB},
volume = {27},
number = {19},
pages = {R1042-R1047},
doi = {10.1016/j.cub.2017.07.045},
pmid = {29017033},
issn = {1879-0445},
mesh = {Crops, Agricultural/genetics ; Epigenesis, Genetic ; Epigenomics/history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Plant Breeding/*history/methods ; Russia ; USSR ; },
abstract = {During the late 1940s and 1950s, a pseudo-scientific concept based on Marxist-Leninist ideology became internationally known as 'Lysenkoism'. Lysenkoism was a neo-Lamarckian idea, claiming that in crop plants, such as wheat, environmental influences are heritable via all cells of the organism. Lysenkoism was applied to agriculture during the Stalin era with disastrous consequences. Despite the triumphs of modern genetics, and the disproval of Lysenkoism, recent years have seen a 're-thinking' of this doctrine in Russia. This disturbing pro-Lysenko movement, which is accompanied by a growing sympathy for Stalin, claims to have its scientific roots in modern epigenetics, specifically the heritability of variation by mechanisms other than changes in DNA sequence. Based on recent research on the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, its is clear that Lysenkoism has nothing to do with heritable 'epigenetic' modifications. Biologists should defend science against ideological and political interferences.},
}
@article {pmid29237895,
year = {2017},
author = {Rao, V},
title = {J. B. S. Haldane and Journal of Genetics.},
journal = {Journal of genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {5},
pages = {855-864},
pmid = {29237895},
issn = {0973-7731},
mesh = {*Genetic Research ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; *Periodicals as Topic ; *Publishing ; },
abstract = {This is a brief sketch of the history of Journal of Genetics from its beginning in 1909 to the taking over of its publication by the Indian Academy of Sciences in 1985. The account is centred on J. B. S. Haldane's involvement with it over many years, especially as Editor, initially in the UK and later in India.},
}
@article {pmid29237894,
year = {2017},
author = {Mcouat, G},
title = {J. B. S. Haldane's passage to India: reconfiguring science.},
journal = {Journal of genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {5},
pages = {845-852},
pmid = {29237894},
issn = {0973-7731},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; India ; Science/*history ; },
abstract = {In 1957, John Burdon Sanderson (JBS) Haldane (1892-1964), the world's leading population geneticist, committed political radical and one of the three 'founders' of neo-Darwinian 'Modern Synthesis' of twentieth century biology (Sarkar 1995; Haldane 1932; Cain 2009; Smocovitis 1996), ostentatiously renounced both his British citizenship and his prestigious chair at University College London. In a decisively and very public anti-imperial gesture, ostensibly played out as a reaction to the Suez crisis (although his discontent was simmering for quite some time), Haldane, and his partner, geneticistHelen Spurway (1917-1977), turned their backs on Britain and set off to India to offer their considerable scientific prestige, their inexhaustible organisational abilities, along with their leading Journal of Genetics, behind the efforts to build a 'modern', democratic India emerging out of the ashes of colonial rule. Haldane's support of independent India was a major triumph for the new state, itself in the midst of negotiating a fine balance between rapid modernization through science and technology and an postcolonial respect for traditional 'non-Western' values. Although his time in India was short, Haldane's few years in India were marked by a frenzied engagement with the new India, its science, its government and its culture (Rao 2013).},
}
@article {pmid29237892,
year = {2017},
author = {Damodaran, V},
title = {Janaki Ammal, C. D. Darlington and J. B. S. Haldane: scientific encounters at the end of empire.},
journal = {Journal of genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {5},
pages = {827-836},
pmid = {29237892},
issn = {0973-7731},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; *Genetic Research ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; *Models, Genetic ; },
abstract = {Right from the beginning, genetics has been an international venture, with international networks involving the collaboration of scientists across continents. Janaki Ammal's career illustrates this. This paper traces her scientific path by situating it in the context of her relationships with J. B. S. Haldane and C. D. Darlington.},
}
@article {pmid29237885,
year = {2017},
author = {Rao, V},
title = {Haldane's view of natural selection.},
journal = {Journal of genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {5},
pages = {765-772},
pmid = {29237885},
issn = {0973-7731},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Models, Genetic ; *Selection, Genetic ; United States ; },
abstract = {Among many things, J. B. S. Haldane is known for demonstrating how the principle of natural selection can be used to build a mathematical, and in particular quantitative, theory of evolution. However, to the end, he remained open to the idea of other evolutionary mechanisms. In his late writings, he repeatedly drew attention to situations in which natural selection did not operate, was hemmed in by constraints, or worked in a surprising manner. In this respect Haldane stands out among the architects of the Modern Synthesis.},
}
@article {pmid28600396,
year = {2017},
author = {Rosbash, M},
title = {A 50-Year Personal Journey: Location, Gene Expression, and Circadian Rhythms.},
journal = {Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology},
volume = {9},
number = {12},
pages = {},
doi = {10.1101/cshperspect.a032516},
pmid = {28600396},
issn = {1943-0264},
mesh = {Animals ; *Circadian Rhythm ; Cloning, Molecular ; DNA, Recombinant/genetics ; Gene Expression ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Massachusetts ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Universities ; },
abstract = {I worked almost exclusively on nucleic acids and gene expression from the age of 19 as an undergraduate until the age of 38 as an associate professor. Mentors featured prominently in my choice of paths. My friendship with influential Brandeis colleagues then persuaded me that genetics was an important tool for studying gene expression, and I switched my experimental organism to yeast for this reason. Several years later, friendship also played a prominent role in my beginning work on circadian rhythms. As luck would have it, gene expression as well as genetics turned out to be important for circadian timekeeping. As a consequence, background and training put my laboratory in an excellent position to contribute to this aspect of the circadian problem. The moral of the story is, as in real estate, "location, location, location."},
}
@article {pmid29445977,
year = {2018},
author = {Silva, L},
title = {A Brief History of Biochemical Genetics' 50 Years and a Reflection About Past and Present Research Directions.},
journal = {Biochemical genetics},
volume = {56},
number = {1-2},
pages = {1-6},
doi = {10.1007/s10528-018-9846-9},
pmid = {29445977},
issn = {1573-4927},
mesh = {Biochemistry/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Portraits as Topic ; },
}
@article {pmid29339467,
year = {2018},
author = {Ravindran, S},
title = {Profile of Scott W. Lowe.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {115},
number = {4},
pages = {630-632},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1721809115},
pmid = {29339467},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Genes, Neoplasm ; Genes, p53 ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Medical Oncology/*history/methods ; Oncogenes ; },
}
@article {pmid28755204,
year = {2017},
author = {Yan, W and Huang, B and Ruan, L and Tan, W},
title = {Dr. Chi-Ming Chu: Respected founder of molecular virology and pioneer of biologicals in China.},
journal = {Protein & cell},
volume = {8},
number = {9},
pages = {629-633},
doi = {10.1007/s13238-017-0445-z},
pmid = {28755204},
issn = {1674-8018},
mesh = {China ; Hepatitis B virus/immunology ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Orthomyxoviridae/immunology ; Viral Vaccines/*immunology ; Virology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid29927928,
year = {2018},
author = {Weinberg, SM and Cornell, R and Leslie, EJ},
title = {Craniofacial genetics: Where have we been and where are we going?.},
journal = {PLoS genetics},
volume = {14},
number = {6},
pages = {e1007438},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pgen.1007438},
pmid = {29927928},
issn = {1553-7404},
mesh = {Animals ; Craniofacial Abnormalities/*genetics ; Genetic Techniques/*trends ; Genetics/history/*trends ; Head/abnormalities/anatomy & histology/*growth & development ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mice ; Models, Animal ; Zebrafish ; },
}
@article {pmid29540437,
year = {2018},
author = {Ferguson-Smith, AC and Bartolomei, MS},
title = {Obituary: Denise Barlow (1950-2017).},
journal = {Development (Cambridge, England)},
volume = {145},
number = {5},
pages = {},
doi = {10.1242/dev.164616},
pmid = {29540437},
issn = {1477-9129},
mesh = {Animals ; Austria ; Developmental Biology/*history ; Epigenesis, Genetic ; Epigenomics/*history ; Genomic Imprinting/*physiology ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Laboratory Personnel/history ; United Kingdom ; },
abstract = {Anne Ferguson-Smith and Marisa Bartolomei look back at the life and science of Denise Barlow, a pioneer in genomic imprinting and epigenetics.},
}
@article {pmid29538439,
year = {2018},
author = {Rusu, I and Modi, A and Vai, S and Pilli, E and Mircea, C and Radu, C and Urduzia, C and Pinter, ZK and Bodolică, V and Dobrinescu, C and Hervella, M and Popescu, O and Lari, M and Caramelli, D and Kelemen, B},
title = {Maternal DNA lineages at the gate of Europe in the 10th century AD.},
journal = {PloS one},
volume = {13},
number = {3},
pages = {e0193578},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0193578},
pmid = {29538439},
issn = {1932-6203},
mesh = {Archaeology ; Bone and Bones/metabolism ; DNA, Mitochondrial/classification/genetics/isolation & purification/*metabolism ; European Continental Ancestry Group/*genetics ; Genetics, Population/history ; Haplotypes ; High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ; History, Medieval ; Humans ; Phylogeny ; Principal Component Analysis ; Romania ; Sequence Analysis, DNA ; },
abstract = {Given the paucity of archaeogenetic data available for medieval European populations in comparison to other historical periods, the genetic landscape of this age appears as a puzzle of dispersed, small, known pieces. In particular, Southeastern Europe has been scarcely investigated to date. In this paper, we report the study of mitochondrial DNA in 10th century AD human samples from Capidava necropolis, located in Dobruja (Southeastern Romania, Southeastern Europe). This geographical region is particularly interesting because of the extensive population flux following diverse migration routes, and the complex interactions between distinct population groups during the medieval period. We successfully amplified and typed the mitochondrial control region of 10 individuals. For five of them, we also reconstructed the complete mitochondrial genomes using hybridization-based DNA capture combined with Next Generation Sequencing. We have portrayed the genetic structure of the Capidava medieval population, represented by 10 individuals displaying 8 haplotypes (U5a1c2a, V1a, R0a2'3, H1, U3a, N9a9, H5e1a1, and H13a1a3). Remarkable for this site is the presence of both Central Asiatic (N9a) and common European mtDNA haplotypes, establishing Capidava as a point of convergence between East and West. The distribution of mtDNA lineages in the necropolis highlighted the existence of two groups of two individuals with close maternal relationships as they share the same haplotypes. We also sketch, using comparative statistical and population genetic analyses, the genetic relationships between the investigated dataset and other medieval and modern Eurasian populations.},
}
@article {pmid29358548,
year = {2017},
author = {Singh, J},
title = {Amar Klar: A giant among scientists (1947-2017).},
journal = {Journal of biosciences},
volume = {42},
number = {3},
pages = {355-357},
pmid = {29358548},
issn = {0973-7138},
mesh = {Biochemistry ; DNA/physiology ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid29293741,
year = {2017},
author = {Collier, RJ and Bauman, DE},
title = {TRIENNIAL LACTATION SYMPOSIUM/BOLFA:Historical perspectives of lactation biology in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.},
journal = {Journal of animal science},
volume = {95},
number = {12},
pages = {5639-5652},
doi = {10.2527/jas2017.1875},
pmid = {29293741},
issn = {1525-3163},
mesh = {Animals ; Cattle/genetics/*physiology ; Female ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Lactation ; Mammary Glands, Animal/physiology ; Metabolomics/*history ; Milk/*chemistry/metabolism ; Systems Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {The latter half of the 20th century and the early portion of the 21st century will be recognized as the "Golden Age" of lactation biology. This period corresponded with the rise of systemic, metabolomic, molecular, and genomic biology. It includes the discovery of the structure of DNA and ends with the sequencing of the complete genomes of humans and all major domestic animal species including the dairy cow. This included the ability to identify polymorphisms in the nucleic acid sequence, which can be tied to specific differences in cellular, tissue, and animal performance. Before this period, classical work using endocrine ablation and replacement studies identified the mammary gland as an endocrine-dependent organ. In the early 1960s, the development of RIA and radioreceptor assays permitted the study of the relationship between endocrine patterns and mammary function. The ability to measure nucleic acid content of tissues opened the door to study of the factors regulating mammary growth. The development of high-speed centrifugation in the 1960s allowed separation of specific cell organelles and their membranes. The development of transmission and scanning electron microscopy permitted the study of the relationship between structure and function in the mammary secretory cell. The availability of radiolabeled metabolites provided the opportunity to investigate the metabolic pathways and their regulation. The development of concepts regarding the coordination of metabolism to support lactation integrated our understanding of nutrient partitioning and homeostasis. The ability to produce recombinant molecules and organisms permitted enhancement of lactation in farm animal species and the production of milk containing proteins of value to human medicine. These discoveries and others contributed to vastly increased dairy farm productivity in the United States and worldwide. This review will include the discussion of the centers of excellence and scientists who labored in these fields to produce the harvest of knowledge we enjoy today.},
}
@article {pmid29288271,
year = {2017},
author = {Jager, MJ},
title = {Introducing Johanna M. Seddon, the 2017 Recipient of the Mildred Weisenfeld Award.},
journal = {Investigative ophthalmology & visual science},
volume = {58},
number = {14},
pages = {6510-6512},
doi = {10.1167/iovs.17-23542},
pmid = {29288271},
issn = {1552-5783},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Epidemiology/*history ; Netherlands ; Ophthalmology/*history ; Societies, Scientific/*history ; Wet Macular Degeneration/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid29251435,
year = {2017},
author = {Chenette, EJ},
title = {Announcing the winners of our 50th Anniversary Science Communication Competition.},
journal = {The FEBS journal},
volume = {284},
number = {24},
pages = {4172-4173},
doi = {10.1111/febs.14329},
pmid = {29251435},
issn = {1742-4658},
mesh = {Audiovisual Aids ; *Awards and Prizes ; Biological Science Disciplines/*history ; Europe ; History, 21st Century ; Mexico ; Molecular Biology/history ; Motion Pictures ; Neurosciences/history ; Posters as Topic ; Singapore ; *Societies, Scientific ; },
abstract = {The FEBS Journal is pleased to announce the three winners of its 50th Anniversary Science Communication Competition. Read on to see their prize-winning entries!},
}
@article {pmid29239359,
year = {2017},
author = {Cornish, VW},
title = {Ronald Breslow (1931-2017).},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {552},
number = {7684},
pages = {176},
doi = {10.1038/d41586-017-08461-5},
pmid = {29239359},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {Antineoplastic Agents/history ; Biochemistry/*history ; Chemistry, Organic/*history ; Coenzymes/chemistry/metabolism ; Cyclodextrins/metabolism ; History, 20th Century ; Hydroxamic Acids/history ; Mentoring ; Molecular Biology/history ; New Jersey ; New York City ; Thiamine/analogs & derivatives/chemistry/pharmacology ; Thiamine Pyrophosphate/chemistry/pharmacology ; Women's Rights/history ; },
}
@article {pmid29226715,
year = {2017},
author = {Raskó, I and Horváth, E},
title = {[Professor George Szemere (1931-2016) founder of the first regional genetic counselling service in Hungary].},
journal = {Orvosi hetilap},
volume = {158},
number = {50},
pages = {2003-2006},
doi = {10.1556/650.2017.HO2586},
pmid = {29226715},
issn = {0030-6002},
mesh = {Genetic Counseling/*history ; Genetic Testing/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Hungary ; Male ; },
}
@article {pmid29218550,
year = {2017},
author = {Weiss, TM},
title = {Small Angle Scattering: Historical Perspective and Future Outlook.},
journal = {Advances in experimental medicine and biology},
volume = {1009},
number = {},
pages = {1-10},
doi = {10.1007/978-981-10-6038-0_1},
pmid = {29218550},
issn = {0065-2598},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history/instrumentation/methods/trends ; Neutron Diffraction/*history/instrumentation/methods ; *Scattering, Small Angle ; Synchrotrons/history/instrumentation ; X-Ray Diffraction/*history/instrumentation/methods ; },
abstract = {Small angle scattering (SAS) is a powerful and versatile tool to elucidate the structure of matter at the nanometer scale. Recently, the technique has seen a tremendous growth of applications in the field of structural molecular biology. Its origins however date back to almost a century ago and even though the methods potential for studying biological macromolecules was realized already early on, it was only during the last two decades that SAS gradually became a major experimental technique for the structural biologist. This rise in popularity and application was driven by the concurrence of different key factors such as the increased accessibility to high quality SAS instruments enabled by the growing number of synchrotron facilities and neutron sources established around the world, the emerging need of the structural biology community to study large multi-domain complexes and flexible systems that are hard to crystalize, and in particular the development and availability of data analysis software together with the overall access to computational resources powerful enough to run them. Today, SAS is an established and widely used tool for structural studies on bio-macromolecules. Given the potential offered by the next generation X-ray and neutron sources as well as the development of new, innovative approaches to collect and analyze solution scattering data, the application of SAS in the field of structural molecular biology will certainly continue to thrive in the years to come.},
}
@article {pmid29213124,
year = {2018},
author = {Cope, AP and Barnes, MR and Belson, A and Binks, M and Brockbank, S and Bonachela-Capdevila, F and Carini, C and Fisher, BA and Goodyear, CS and Emery, P and Ehrenstein, MR and Gozzard, N and Harris, R and Hollis, S and Keidel, S and Levesque, M and Lindholm, C and McDermott, MF and McInnes, IB and Mela, CM and Parker, G and Read, S and Pedersen, AW and Ponchel, F and Porter, D and Rao, R and Rowe, A and Schulz-Knappe, P and Sleeman, MA and Symmons, D and Taylor, PC and Tom, B and Tsuji, W and Verbeeck, D and Isaacs, JD and , },
title = {The RA-MAP Consortium: a working model for academia-industry collaboration.},
journal = {Nature reviews. Rheumatology},
volume = {14},
number = {1},
pages = {53-60},
doi = {10.1038/nrrheum.2017.200},
pmid = {29213124},
issn = {1759-4804},
support = {G1001516//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; 18475//Arthritis Research UK/United Kingdom ; MC_UP_1302/3//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; G1001518//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; RC-PG-0407-10054//Department of Health/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Arthritis, Rheumatoid/*genetics/therapy ; Biomarkers ; Biomedical Research/*organization & administration ; *Cooperative Behavior ; Genomics/history/*methods ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Industry/*organization & administration ; Phenotype ; Research/*organization & administration ; United Kingdom/epidemiology ; },
abstract = {Collaboration can be challenging; nevertheless, the emerging successes of large, multi-partner, multi-national cooperatives and research networks in the biomedical sector have sustained the appetite of academics and industry partners for developing and fostering new research consortia. This model has percolated down to national funding agencies across the globe, leading to funding for projects that aim to realise the true potential of genomic medicine in the 21st century and to reap the rewards of 'big data'. In this Perspectives article, the experiences of the RA-MAP consortium, a group of more than 140 individuals affiliated with 21 academic and industry organizations that are focused on making genomic medicine in rheumatoid arthritis a reality are described. The challenges of multi-partner collaboration in the UK are highlighted and wide-ranging solutions are offered that might benefit large research consortia around the world.},
}
@article {pmid29203699,
year = {2017},
author = {Hoskins, SG},
title = {Inside the Literature: An Interview with Sally G. Hoskins, 2017 Recipient of the Elizabeth W. Jones Award for Excellence in Education.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {207},
number = {4},
pages = {1223-1225},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.117.300416},
pmid = {29203699},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Awards and Prizes ; *Education ; Genetics/*education/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Publications ; },
abstract = {The Genetics Society of America's Elizabeth W. Jones Award for Excellence in Education recognizes significant and sustained impact on genetics education. The 2017 recipient is Sally G. Hoskins, in recognition of her role in developing and promoting the transformative science education method CREATE (Consider, Read, Elucidate hypotheses, Analyze and interpret data, and Think of the next Experiment). This innovative approach uses primary literature to engage students, allowing them to experience for themselves the creativity and challenge of study design, analysis, interpretation, collaboration, and debate. Comprehensive evaluation of CREATE has consistently found that students improve in difficult-to-teach skills like critical thinking and experimental design, while showing improved attitudes and beliefs about science.This is an abridged version of the interview. The full interview is available on the Genes to Genomes blog, at genestogenomes.org/hoskins/.},
}
@article {pmid29203698,
year = {2017},
author = {Kingsley, DM},
title = {Beautiful Piles of Bones: An Interview with 2017 Genetics Society of America Medal Recipient David M. Kingsley.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {207},
number = {4},
pages = {1221-1222},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.117.300415},
pmid = {29203698},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; Awards and Prizes ; *Biological Evolution ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mice ; Mutation ; Skeleton/*growth & development ; Smegmamorpha/genetics ; },
abstract = {The Genetics Society of America Medal is awarded to an individual for outstanding contributions to the field of genetics in the last 15 years. Recipients of the GSA Medal are recognized for elegant and highly meaningful contributions to modern genetics, exemplifying the ingenuity of GSA membership. The 2017 recipient is David M. Kingsley, whose work in mouse, sticklebacks, and humans has shifted paradigms about how vertebrates evolve. Kingsley first fell in love with genetics in graduate school, where he worked on receptor mediated endocytosis with Monty Krieger. In his postdoctoral training he was able to unite genetics with his first scientific love: vertebrate morphology. He joined the group of Neal Copeland and Nancy Jenkins, where he led efforts to map the classical mouse skeletal mutation short ear Convinced that experimental genetics had a unique power to reveal the inner workings of evolution, Kingsley then established the stickleback fish as an extraordinarily productive model of quantitative trait evolution in wild species. He and his colleagues revealed many important insights, including the discoveries that major morphological differences can map to key loci with large effects, that regulatory changes in essential developmental control genes have produced advantageous new traits, and that nature has selected the same genes over and over again to drive the stickleback's skeletal evolution. Recently, Kingsley's group has been using these lessons to reveal more about how our own species evolved.This is an abridged version of the interview. The full interview is available on the Genes to Genomes blog, at genestogenomes.org/kingsley/.},
}
@article {pmid29203697,
year = {2017},
author = {Hodgkin, J},
title = {Frontiers of Knowledge: An Interview with 2017 Edward Novitski Prize Recipient Jonathan Hodgkin.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {207},
number = {4},
pages = {1219-1220},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.117.300400},
pmid = {29203697},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; Awards and Prizes ; Caenorhabditis elegans/*genetics/physiology ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Sex Determination Processes ; },
abstract = {The Genetics Society of America's Edward Novitski Prize recognizes a single experimental accomplishment or a body of work in which an exceptional level of creativity and intellectual ingenuity has been used to design and execute scientific experiments to solve a difficult problem in genetics. The 2017 winner, Jonathan Hodgkin, used elegant genetic studies to unravel the sex determination pathway in Caenorhabditis elegans He inferred the order of genes in the pathway and their modes of regulation using epistasis analyses-a powerful tool that was quickly adopted by other researchers. He expanded the number and use of informational suppressor mutants in C. elegans that are able to act on many genes. He also introduced the use of collections of wild C. elegans to study naturally occurring genetic variation, paving the way for SNP mapping and QTL analysis, as well as studies of hybrid incompatibilities between worm species. His current work focuses on nematode-bacterial interactions and innate immunity.},
}
@article {pmid29203696,
year = {2017},
author = {Gerbi, SA},
title = {Treasure Your Exceptions: An Interview with 2017 George Beadle Award Recipient Susan A. Gerbi.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {207},
number = {4},
pages = {1215-1217},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.117.300398},
pmid = {29203696},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Awards and Prizes ; DNA/genetics ; DNA Replication/genetics ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; RNA, Ribosomal/genetics ; },
abstract = {THE Genetics Society of America's (GSA) George W. Beadle Award honors individuals who have made outstanding contributions to the community of genetics researchers and who exemplify the qualities of its namesake. The 2017 recipient is Susan A. Gerbi, who has been a prominent leader and advocate for the scientific community. In the course of her research on DNA replication, Gerbi helped develop the method of Replication Initiation Point (RIP) mapping to map replication origins at the nucleotide level, improving resolution by two orders of magnitude. RIP mapping also provides the basis for the now popular use of λ-exonuclease to enrich nascent DNA to map replication origins genome-wide. Gerbi's second area of research on ribosomal RNA revealed a conserved core secondary structure, as well as conserved nucleotide elements (CNEs). Some CNEs are universally conserved, while other CNEs are conserved in all eukaryotes but not in archaea or bacteria, suggesting a eukaryotic function. Intriguingly, the majority of the eukaryotic-specific CNEs line the tunnel of the large ribosomal subunit through which the nascent polypeptide exits. Gerbi has promoted the fly Sciara coprophila as a model organism ever since she used its enormous polytene chromosomes to help develop the method of in situ hybridization during her Ph.D. research in Joe Gall's laboratory. The Gerbi laboratory maintains the Sciara International Stock Center and manages its future, actively spreading Sciara stocks to other laboratories. Gerbi has also served in many leadership roles, working on issues of science policy, women in science, scientific training, and career preparation. This is an abridged version of the interview. The full interview is available on the Genes to Genomes blog, at genestogenomes.org/gerbi.},
}
@article {pmid29203695,
year = {2017},
author = {Lewontin, RC},
title = {Random Factors: An Interview with 2017 Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal Recipient Richard C. Lewontin.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {207},
number = {4},
pages = {1213-1214},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.117.300396},
pmid = {29203695},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Awards and Prizes ; *Biological Evolution ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics/*history ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
abstract = {The Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal is awarded to an individual member of the Genetics Society of America for lifetime achievement in the field of genetics. It recognizes the full body of work of an exceptional geneticist. The 2017 recipient is Richard C. Lewontin, whose contributions and influence have profoundly shaped the field of evolutionary genetics. As a testament to this legacy, his nomination for the Morgan Medal was cosigned by 160 faculty members from around the world. A student of Theodosius Dobzhansky, Lewontin's early work established the two-locus theory, which laid the foundation for our understanding of linkage disequilibrium. In the 1960s, he collaborated with biochemist Jack Hubby on a method to quantify natural genetic variation using protein gel electrophoresis. This approach helped launch the field of molecular evolution and spurred a great influx of data into a formerly theory-dominated domain. The subsequent contributions of Lewontin and his group helped set the stage for much of modern population genetics and genomics research. As well as this direct impact, Lewontin influenced the field through his guidance and inspiration, as well as through his capacity to spur vigorous but productive debates. His prominent role as a writer and social commentator included highlighting problems with the inference of heritability, concepts of race, and the overemphasis of genetic influences on phenotypes.},
}
@article {pmid29168817,
year = {2017},
author = {Dolgin, E},
title = {The most popular genes in the human genome.},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {551},
number = {7681},
pages = {427-431},
doi = {10.1038/d41586-017-07291-9},
pmid = {29168817},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {Animals ; Apolipoproteins E/genetics/metabolism ; *Bibliometrics ; Biomedical Research/history/*statistics & numerical data ; CD4 Antigens/genetics/immunology ; Drosophila melanogaster/genetics ; GRB2 Adaptor Protein/genetics/metabolism ; *Genes, p53 ; Genetics/history/*statistics & numerical data ; Genome, Human/*genetics ; Hemoglobins/genetics ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Male ; Mice ; Rats ; Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/genetics/metabolism ; Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/genetics/metabolism ; },
}
@article {pmid29116060,
year = {2017},
author = {},
title = {[Academician Andrey Dar'evich Mirzabekov (to the 80th anniversary)].},
journal = {Molekuliarnaia biologiia},
volume = {51},
number = {5},
pages = {747-751},
pmid = {29116060},
issn = {0026-8984},
mesh = {Animals ; Anniversaries and Special Events ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Russia ; },
}
@article {pmid29033228,
year = {2017},
author = {Nicoglou, A and Merlin, F},
title = {Epigenetics: A way to bridge the gap between biological fields.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {66},
number = {},
pages = {73-82},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2017.10.002},
pmid = {29033228},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Developmental Biology/history ; *Epigenesis, Genetic ; Epigenomics/*history ; Heredity ; History, 20th Century ; United Kingdom ; },
abstract = {The concept of epigenetics has evolved since Waddington defined it from the late 1930s as the study of the causal mechanisms at work in development. It has become a multi-faceted notion with different meanings, depending on the disciplinary context it is used. In this article, we first analyse the transformations of the concept of epigenetics, from Waddington to contemporary accounts, in order to identify its different meanings and traditions, and to come up with a typology of epigenetics throughout its history. Second, we show on this basis that epigenetics has progressively turned its main focus from biological problems regarding development, toward issues concerning evolution. Yet, both these different epistemological aspects of epigenetics still coexist. Third, we claim that the classical opposition between epigenesis and preformationism as ways of thinking about the developmental process is part of the history of epigenetics and has contributed to its current various meanings. With these objectives in mind, we first show how Waddington introduced the term "epigenetics" in a biological context in order to solve a developmental problem, and we then build on this by presenting Nanney's, Riggs' and Holliday's definitions, which form the basis for the current conception of "molecular epigenetics". Then, we show that the evo-devo research field is where some particular uses of epigenetics have started shifting from developmental issues to evolutionary problems. We also show that epigenetics has progressively focused on the issue of epigenetic inheritance within the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis' framework. Finally, we conclude by presenting a typology of the different conceptions of epigenetics throughout time, and analyse the connections between them. We argue that, since Waddington, epigenetics, as an integrative research area, has been used to bridge the gap between different biological fields.},
}
@article {pmid28994388,
year = {2017},
author = {Jordan, B},
title = {[Cancer: three eras of personalized medicine].},
journal = {Medecine sciences : M/S},
volume = {33},
number = {10},
pages = {905-908},
doi = {10.1051/medsci/20173310024},
pmid = {28994388},
issn = {1958-5381},
mesh = {Biomarkers, Tumor/genetics ; Gene Expression Profiling/history/methods/trends ; Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ; Genomics/history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Medical Oncology/history/methods/trends ; Microarray Analysis/history/methods/trends ; Molecular Targeted Therapy/history/trends ; Neoplasms/diagnosis/*genetics/therapy ; Precision Medicine/*history/methods/*trends ; Prognosis ; },
abstract = {Since the completion of the first human DNA sequence, genomic approaches have penetrated into cancer research and therapy: first through expression profiling for diagnostic, prognostic and predictive purposes, then by sequencing of tumour DNA in order to define and apply targeted therapies. These overlapping changes occurred quite rapidly and are now overshadowed by immuno-oncology approaches that show much promise. There is however still much left to understand to make this more widely applicable, and the extreme cost of these therapies is a serious concern.},
}
@article {pmid28968595,
year = {2017},
author = {},
title = {Ingemar Gustavsson (1938-2016).},
journal = {Cytogenetic and genome research},
volume = {152},
number = {4},
pages = {167-168},
doi = {10.1159/000480744},
pmid = {28968595},
issn = {1424-859X},
mesh = {Animals ; Breeding/history ; Cytogenetics/*history ; Female ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Livestock/genetics ; Male ; Sweden ; Veterinary Medicine/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid28947653,
year = {2017},
author = {Heard, E and Brockdorff, N},
title = {Preface.},
journal = {Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences},
volume = {372},
number = {1733},
pages = {},
doi = {10.1098/rstb.2016.0353},
pmid = {28947653},
issn = {1471-2970},
mesh = {Animals ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mammals/*genetics/growth & development ; Mice ; United Kingdom ; *X Chromosome Inactivation ; },
}
@article {pmid28888231,
year = {2017},
author = {},
title = {Preface to glyco-neuroscience.},
journal = {Biochimica et biophysica acta},
volume = {1861},
number = {10},
pages = {2417-2419},
doi = {10.1016/j.bbagen.2017.08.009},
pmid = {28888231},
issn = {0006-3002},
mesh = {Animals ; Central Nervous System/*metabolism/physiology/physiopathology ; Glycolipids/chemistry/*metabolism ; Glycomics/*history/manpower/methods ; Glycosaminoglycans/chemistry/*metabolism ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Neuronal Plasticity/physiology ; Neurosciences/*history/manpower/methods ; Synaptic Transmission/physiology ; },
}
@article {pmid28886375,
year = {2017},
author = {Chomet, P and Martienssen, R},
title = {Barbara McClintock's Final Years as Nobelist and Mentor: A Memoir.},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {170},
number = {6},
pages = {1049-1054},
doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2017.08.040},
pmid = {28886375},
issn = {1097-4172},
support = {R01 GM067014/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {*DNA Transposable Elements ; Genes, Plant ; Genetics/*education/history ; History, 20th Century ; Nobel Prize ; Physiology/history ; Zea mays/genetics ; },
abstract = {September 2, 2017, marks the 25th year after the passing of Dr. Barbara McClintock, geneticist and recipient of the 1983 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for her discovery of transposable elements in maize. This memoir focuses on the last years of her life-after the prize-and includes personal recollections of how she mentored young scientists and inspired the age of genetics, epigenetics, and genomics.},
}
@article {pmid28874451,
year = {2017},
author = {Zhang, H and Chen, W and Sun, K},
title = {Mendelism: New Insights from Gregor Mendel's Lectures in Brno.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {207},
number = {1},
pages = {1-8},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.117.201434},
pmid = {28874451},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Austria-Hungary ; Congresses as Topic/history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; Peas/genetics ; Periodicals as Topic/*history ; Societies, Scientific/history ; },
abstract = {Interpretation of Gregor Mendel's work has previously been based on study of his published paper "Experiments in Plant Hybridization." In contrast, the lectures that he gave preceding publication of this work have been largely neglected for more than 150 years. Here, we report on and interpret the content of Mendel's previous two lectures, as they were reported in a local newspaper. We comprehensively reference both the text of his paper and the historical background of his experiments. Our analysis shows that while Mendel had inherited the traditional research program on interspecific hybridization in plants, he introduced the novel method of ratio analysis for representing the variation of unit-characters among offspring of hybrids. His aim was to characterize and explain the developmental features of the distributional pattern of unit-characters in two series of hybrid experiments, using self-crosses and backcrosses with parents. In doing so, he not only answered the question of what the unit-characters were and the nature of their hierarchical classification, but also successfully inferred the numerical principle of unit-character transmission from generation to generation. He also established the nature of the composition and behaviors of reproductive cells from one generation to the next. Here we highlight the evidence from Mendel's lectures, clearly announcing that he had discovered the general law of cross-generation transmission of unit-characters through reproductive cells containing unit-factors. The recovered content of these previous lectures more accurately describes the work he performed with his garden peas than his published paper and shows how he first presented it in Brno. It is thus an invaluable resource for understanding the origin of the science of genetics.},
}
@article {pmid28863441,
year = {2017},
author = {},
title = {Dr Fauconnier talks to genomics expert, Prof. McCarthy.},
journal = {Cardiovascular research},
volume = {113},
number = {8},
pages = {e26},
doi = {10.1093/cvr/cvx102},
pmid = {28863441},
issn = {1755-3245},
mesh = {Animals ; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/genetics/*history ; Genetic Predisposition to Disease ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Translational Medical Research/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid28794693,
year = {2018},
author = {Harper, PS},
title = {Human genetics in troubled times and places.},
journal = {Hereditas},
volume = {155},
number = {},
pages = {7},
doi = {10.1186/s41065-017-0042-4},
pmid = {28794693},
issn = {1601-5223},
mesh = {Communism ; Eugenics ; Europe ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; Germany ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; National Socialism ; Russia ; Warfare ; },
abstract = {The development of human genetics world-wide during the twentieth century, especially across Europe, has occurred against a background of repeated catastrophes, including two world wars and the ideological problems and repression posed by Nazism and Communism. The published scientific literature gives few hints of these problems and there is a danger that they will be forgotten. The First World War was largely indiscriminate in its carnage, but World War 2 and the preceding years of fascism were associated with widespread migration, especially of Jewish workers expelled from Germany, and of their children, a number of whom would become major contributors to the post-war generation of human and medical geneticists in Britain and America. In Germany itself, eminent geneticists were also involved in the abuses carried out in the name of 'eugenics' and 'race biology'. However, geneticists in America, Britain and the rest of Europe were largely responsible for the ideological foundations of these abuses. In the Soviet Union, geneticists and genetics itself became the object of persecution from the 1930s till as late as the mid 1960s, with an almost complete destruction of the field during this time; this extended also to Eastern Europe and China as part of the influence of Russian communism. Most recently, at the end of the twentieth century, China saw a renewal of government sponsored eugenics programmes, now mostly discarded. During the post-world war 2 decades, human genetics research benefited greatly from recognition of the genetic dangers posed by exposure to radiation, following the atomic bomb explosions in Japan, atmospheric testing and successive accidental nuclear disasters in Russia. Documenting and remembering these traumatic events, now largely forgotten among younger workers, is essential if we are to fully understand the history of human genetics and avoid the repetition of similar disasters in the future. The power of modern human genetic and genomic techniques now gives a greater potential for abuse as well as for beneficial use than has ever been seen in the past.},
}
@article {pmid28792402,
year = {2017},
author = {Lane, R},
title = {Fowzan Alkuraya: leading light in Saudi Human Genome Program.},
journal = {Lancet (London, England)},
volume = {390},
number = {10093},
pages = {446},
doi = {10.1016/S0140-6736(17)31908-6},
pmid = {28792402},
issn = {1474-547X},
mesh = {Genetic Diseases, Inborn/genetics/history ; *Genome, Human ; Genomics/*history ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Portraits as Topic ; Saudi Arabia ; },
}
@article {pmid28784780,
year = {2017},
author = {Griswold, A},
title = {Profile of Nahum Sonenberg.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {114},
number = {34},
pages = {8905-8907},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1711714114},
pmid = {28784780},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Biochemistry/*history ; Canada ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/history ; },
}
@article {pmid28763078,
year = {2017},
author = {García-Sáinz, JA},
title = {[Conference Dr. Ignacio Chávez. Moving towards molecular medicine].},
journal = {Gaceta medica de Mexico},
volume = {153},
number = {3},
pages = {379-382},
pmid = {28763078},
issn = {0016-3813},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Mexico ; Molecular Medicine/history/*trends ; },
abstract = {El solo nombre del Dr. Ignacio Chávez y la calidad académica de los que me han precedido me hacen sentir emocionado, consciente de que me encuentro sobre los hombros de grandes aportadores a nuestra medicina.},
}
@article {pmid28713021,
year = {2017},
author = {Szymanski, M and Barciszewski, J},
title = {The path to the genetic code.},
journal = {Biochimica et biophysica acta},
volume = {1861},
number = {11 Pt A},
pages = {2674-2679},
doi = {10.1016/j.bbagen.2017.07.009},
pmid = {28713021},
issn = {0006-3002},
mesh = {Amino Acid Sequence/genetics ; Genetic Code/*genetics ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Proteins/*genetics ; },
abstract = {In December of 1966 the last nucleotide triplet in the genetic code has been assigned (Brenner et al., 1967 [1]) thus completing years of studies aimed at deciphering the nature of the relationship between the sequences of genes and proteins. The end product, the table of the genetic code, was a crowning achievement of the quest to unravel the basic mechanisms underlying functioning of all living organisms on the molecular level.},
}
@article {pmid28707870,
year = {2016},
author = {Wood, RJ},
title = {News of the Profession: Eloge.},
journal = {Isis; an international review devoted to the history of science and its cultural influences},
volume = {107},
number = {3},
pages = {597-600},
pmid = {28707870},
issn = {0021-1753},
mesh = {Czech Republic ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Natural Science Disciplines/history ; Science/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid28630107,
year = {2017},
author = {McMurry, MT and Krangel, MS},
title = {Pillars Article: A Role for Histone Acetylation in the Developmental Regulation of V(D)J Recombination. Science. 2000. 287: 495-498.},
journal = {Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)},
volume = {199},
number = {1},
pages = {5-8},
pmid = {28630107},
issn = {1550-6606},
mesh = {Acetylation ; Allergy and Immunology/*history ; Animals ; Genetics/*history ; Histones/*metabolism ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Mice ; *Protein Processing, Post-Translational ; V(D)J Recombination/*genetics/immunology ; },
}
@article {pmid28625999,
year = {2017},
author = {Casadio, M},
title = {Andrea Ventura: Decrypting noncoding RNAs.},
journal = {The Journal of cell biology},
volume = {216},
number = {7},
pages = {1866-1867},
doi = {10.1083/jcb.201705217},
pmid = {28625999},
issn = {1540-8140},
mesh = {Biomedical Research/*history ; Career Choice ; Gene Expression Regulation ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Nucleic Acid Conformation ; RNA, Untranslated/chemistry/genetics/*history/metabolism ; Structure-Activity Relationship ; },
abstract = {Ventura explores the biological functions of noncoding RNAs in cancer and development.},
}
@article {pmid28621497,
year = {2017},
author = {Hinderlich, S and Tauber, R and Bertozzi, CR and Hackenberger, CPR},
title = {Werner Reutter: A Visionary Pioneer in Molecular Glycobiology.},
journal = {Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology},
volume = {18},
number = {13},
pages = {1141-1145},
doi = {10.1002/cbic.201700277},
pmid = {28621497},
issn = {1439-7633},
mesh = {Carbohydrate Metabolism/genetics ; Glycomics/history/*manpower/methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Metabolic Engineering/history/methods ; Molecular Biology/history/*manpower/methods ; Sialic Acids/genetics/metabolism ; },
abstract = {A creative pioneer: Werner Reutter (1937-2016) was a scientist who both made fundamental discoveries in glycobiology and reached out to disciplines beyond his core field. Many of his former colleagues and students will remember his desire to exchange research ideas, which ultimately contributed to the birth of new research fields.},
}
@article {pmid28619099,
year = {2017},
author = {Zhang, C and Lu, Y and Feng, Q and Wang, X and Lou, H and Liu, J and Ning, Z and Yuan, K and Wang, Y and Zhou, Y and Deng, L and Liu, L and Yang, Y and Li, S and Ma, L and Zhang, Z and Jin, L and Su, B and Kang, L and Xu, S},
title = {Differentiated demographic histories and local adaptations between Sherpas and Tibetans.},
journal = {Genome biology},
volume = {18},
number = {1},
pages = {115},
doi = {10.1186/s13059-017-1242-y},
pmid = {28619099},
issn = {1474-760X},
mesh = {Acclimatization/*genetics ; Adaptation, Physiological/*genetics ; Altitude ; Altitude Sickness/*genetics ; Asian Continental Ancestry Group/genetics ; Ethnic Groups/genetics ; *Genetic Variation ; Genetics, Population/history ; Genotype ; Haplotypes/genetics ; History, Ancient ; Humans ; Tibet ; },
abstract = {BACKGROUND: The genetic relationships reported by recent studies between Sherpas and Tibetans are controversial. To gain insights into the population history and the genetic basis of high-altitude adaptation of the two groups, we analyzed genome-wide data in 111 Sherpas (Tibet and Nepal) and 177 Tibetans (Tibet and Qinghai), together with available data from present-day human populations.

RESULTS: Sherpas and Tibetans show considerable genetic differences and can be distinguished as two distinct groups, even though the divergence between them (~3200-11,300 years ago) is much later than that between Han Chinese and either of the two groups (~6200-16,000 years ago). Sub-population structures exist in both Sherpas and Tibetans, corresponding to geographical or linguistic groups. Differentiation of genetic variants between Sherpas and Tibetans associated with adaptation to either high-altitude or ultraviolet radiation were identified and validated by genotyping additional Sherpa and Tibetan samples.

RESULTS: Using ancient DNA methodologies, the mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase 1 (ND1) gene, the cytochrome c oxidase 1 (COI) gene, and the control region (CR) were targeted for 15 specimens from Bjørnøya (of which five were entirely negative) and 9 specimens from Håøya (of which one was entirely negative). While ND1 and COI sequences were obtained for only a few samples, the CR delivered the most comprehensive data set, and the average genetic distance among historic Svalbard samples was 0.0028 (SD = 0.0023).

CONCLUSIONS: The CR sequences from the historical samples appear to be nested among contemporary Atlantic walruses, and no distinct mitochondrial haplogroups were identified in the historical samples that may have been lost during the periods of extensive hunting. However, given the low sample size and poor phylogenetic resolution it cannot be excluded that such haplogroups existed.},
}
@article {pmid26875293,
year = {2015},
author = {Sótonyi, G},
title = {[Participation of Hungarians in the Elaboration of Principles of Genetics and of Biotehchnology].},
journal = {Orvostorteneti kozlemenyek},
volume = {61},
number = {1-4},
pages = {125-136},
pmid = {26875293},
issn = {0010-3551},
mesh = {Animal Husbandry/*history ; Biotechnology/*history ; Europe ; Genetic Research/history ; Genetics/*history ; Genetics, Population/history ; *Heredity ; History, 18th Century ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Hungary ; Mutation ; Political Systems/history ; Politics ; Publishing/history ; },
abstract = {It was in 1983 that Robert Bud, director of The Science Museum in London, made it public that the principles of biotechnology, and the term itself were first put into words by a Hungarian scientist, Károly Ereky (The use of life. A history of biotechnology. Cambridge - New York--Melbourne, Cambridge University Press, 1993). Károly Ereky stated that if raw material is used to produce consumer goods with the help of living organisms, the workflow data can be collected in biotechnology. He phrased the principles of biotechnology in his book published in German in 1919 called Biotechnology, ranking him among the world's greatest (Verlag Paul Parey, Berlin, 1919). In 1918 in Brno, three years before the birth of Mendel, count Imre Festetics formulated his theses in 4 points in his publication "Die genetische Gesetze der Natur" (Oekonomische Neuigkeiten und Verhandlungen. Brünn, 22: 169-170, 1819), using the word 'genetics' for the first time in the world. It was Vitezslav Orel, director of the Mendel Museum in Brno, who brought the attention of the world to this fact in 1989, based on the documents possessed by the Museum. The English scientist J.R. Wood published his new findings in 2001, accord- ing to which Festetics summarized his results in the form of four genetic laws well before Mendel, describing principles of the process of mutation and inheritance. Festetics provided evidence for the improvement of the stock by cross-breeding. He stated Mendel's second law on the importance of selection. He called attention to the priority of internal genetic fac- tors. Hungarians can rightly be proud of Károly Ereky (1878-1952) and count Imre Festetics (1764-1847).},
}
@article {pmid26871450,
year = {2016},
author = {Simons, K},
title = {My Early Days with Ari Helenius: Detergents and Viruses.},
journal = {Traffic (Copenhagen, Denmark)},
volume = {17},
number = {4},
pages = {305-307},
doi = {10.1111/tra.12377},
pmid = {26871450},
issn = {1600-0854},
mesh = {Cell Biology/*history ; Finland ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Membrane Lipids/*metabolism ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Semliki forest virus/*metabolism ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26869482,
year = {2016},
author = {Visscher, PM},
title = {Human Complex Trait Genetics in the 21st Century.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {202},
number = {2},
pages = {377-379},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.180513},
pmid = {26869482},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; Delivery of Health Care ; *Genetics, Medical/history/trends ; *Genetics, Population/history/trends ; Genomics/history/trends ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Precision Medicine ; *Quantitative Trait, Heritable ; },
}
@article {pmid26869481,
year = {2016},
author = {Meneely, PM},
title = {Pick Your Poisson: An Educational Primer for Luria and Delbrück's Classic Paper.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {202},
number = {2},
pages = {371-375},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.184564},
pmid = {26869481},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Escherichia coli/*genetics ; *Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Immunity/genetics ; *Models, Genetic ; *Mutation ; Mutation Rate ; Poisson Distribution ; },
abstract = {The origin of beneficial mutations is fundamentally important in understanding the processes by which natural selection works. Using phage-resistant mutants in Escherichia coli as their model for identifying the origin of beneficial mutations, Luria and Delbrück distinguished between two different hypotheses. Under the first hypothesis, which they termed "acquired immunity," the phages induced bacteria to mutate to immunity; this predicts that none of the resistant mutants were present before infection by the phages. Under the second hypothesis, termed "mutation to immunity," resistant bacteria arose from random mutations independent of the presence of the phages; this predicts that resistant bacteria were present in the population before infection by the phages. These two hypotheses could be distinguished by calculating the frequencies at which resistant mutants arose in separate cultures infected at the same time and comparing these frequencies to the theoretical results under each model. The data clearly show that mutations arise at a frequency that is independent of the presence of the phages. By inference, natural selection reveals the genetic variation that is present in a population rather than inducing or causing this variation.},
}
@article {pmid26869480,
year = {2016},
author = {Gelling, C},
title = {Hermann Muller on Measuring Mutation Rates.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {202},
number = {2},
pages = {369-370},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.186171},
pmid = {26869480},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; *Mutation Rate ; Nobel Prize ; },
}
@article {pmid26869479,
year = {2016},
author = {Murray, A},
title = {Salvador Luria and Max Delbrück on Random Mutation and Fluctuation Tests.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {202},
number = {2},
pages = {367-368},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.186163},
pmid = {26869479},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Evolution, Molecular ; *Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; *Mutation ; Nobel Prize ; },
}
@article {pmid26869464,
year = {2017},
author = {Singleton, R and Singleton, DR},
title = {Remembering Our Forebears: Albert Jan Kluyver and the Unity of Life.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {50},
number = {1},
pages = {169-218},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-016-9438-7},
pmid = {26869464},
issn = {1573-0387},
mesh = {Biochemistry/history ; History, 20th Century ; Microbiology/education/*history ; Molecular Biology/history ; Netherlands ; },
abstract = {The Dutch microbiologist/biochemist Albert Jan Kluyver (1888-1956) was an early proponent of the idea of biochemical unity, and how that concept might be demonstrated through the careful study of microbial life. The fundamental relatedness of living systems is an obvious correlate of the theory of evolution, and modern attempts to construct phylogenetic schemes support this relatedness through comparison of genomes. The approach of Kluyver and his scientific descendants predated the tools of modern molecular biology by decades. Kluyver himself is poorly recognized today, yet his influence at the time was profound. Through lens of today however, it has been argued that the focus by Kluyver and others to create taxonomic and phylogenetic schemes using morphology and biochemistry distorted and hindered progress of the discipline of microbiology, because of a perception that the older approaches focused too much on a reductionist worldview. This essay argues that in contrast the careful characterization of fundamental microbial metabolism and physiology by Kluyver made many of the advances of the latter part of the twentieth century possible, by offering a framework which in many respects anticipated our current view of phylogeny, and by directly and indirectly training a generation of scientists who became leaders in the explosive growth of biotechnology.},
}
@article {pmid26869463,
year = {2016},
author = {Kleinman, K},
title = {"Bringing Taxonomy to the Service of Genetics": Edgar Anderson and Introgressive Hybridization.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {49},
number = {4},
pages = {603-624},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-016-9436-9},
pmid = {26869463},
issn = {1573-0387},
mesh = {Botany/*history ; Classification ; Genetic Linkage ; Genetics/*history ; Genetics, Population ; History, 20th Century ; *Hybridization, Genetic ; Plants/classification/genetics ; Selection, Genetic ; United States ; },
abstract = {In introgressive hybridization (the repeated backcrossing of hybrids with parental populations), Edgar Anderson found a source for variation upon which natural selection could work. In his 1953 review article "Introgressive Hybridization," he asserted that he was "bringing taxonomy to the service of genetics" whereas distinguished colleagues such as Theodosius Dobzhansky and Ernst Mayr did the precise opposite. His work as a geneticist particularly focused on linkage and recombination and was enriched by collaborations with Missouri Botanical Garden colleagues interested in taxonomy as well as with cytologists C.D. Darlington and Karl Sax. As the culmination of a biosystemtatic research program, Anderson's views challenged the mainstream of the Evolutionary Synthesis.},
}
@article {pmid26857664,
year = {2016},
author = {Fimmel, E and Strüngmann, L},
title = {Yury Borisovich Rumer and his 'biological papers' on the genetic code.},
journal = {Philosophical transactions. Series A, Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences},
volume = {374},
number = {2063},
pages = {},
doi = {10.1098/rsta.2015.0228},
pmid = {26857664},
issn = {1364-503X},
mesh = {Genetic Code/*genetics ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Models, Genetic ; *Publications ; },
abstract = {Yury Borisovich Rumer was one of the most important theoretical physicists of the former Soviet Union in the early 1930s. However, he also wrote a few 'biological papers' on the standard genetic code after he read Crick's and Nirenberg's pioneering papers on the topic. Rumer's articles on the 'Systematization of Codons in the Genetic Code' (Rumer 1966 Doklady Akademii nauk SSSR 167, 1393-1394); Rumer 1968 Doklady Akademii nauk SSSR 183, 225-226; Rumer 1969 Doklady Akademii nauk SSSR 187, 937-938, where he suggested the idea of partitioning codons depending on their redundancy-the first mention of symmetry in the genetic code-were published in Russian only. Due to their importance and their frequent citation, we here present translations of these articles into English in order to make them accessible to a broader community.},
}
@article {pmid26850620,
year = {2016},
author = {Mounolou, JC},
title = {[In the beginning was the Word].},
journal = {Medecine sciences : M/S},
volume = {32},
number = {1},
pages = {125-126},
doi = {10.1051/medsci/20163201022},
pmid = {26850620},
issn = {1958-5381},
mesh = {*DNA/analysis/history ; Genetic Code/*physiology ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Publications ; *Religion and Science ; Terminology as Topic ; },
}
@article {pmid26850619,
year = {2016},
author = {Miné-Hattab, J},
title = {[Lasker award 2015: spotlight on DNA repair].},
journal = {Medecine sciences : M/S},
volume = {32},
number = {1},
pages = {123-124},
doi = {10.1051/medsci/20163201021},
pmid = {26850619},
issn = {1958-5381},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; *DNA Repair ; Genetics/*history ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Massachusetts ; New Jersey ; Radiobiology/*history ; SOS Response (Genetics)/physiology/radiation effects ; },
}
@article {pmid26850617,
year = {2016},
author = {Jordan, B},
title = {[A Nobel Prize for DNA repair].},
journal = {Medecine sciences : M/S},
volume = {32},
number = {1},
pages = {117-119},
doi = {10.1051/medsci/20163201019},
pmid = {26850617},
issn = {1958-5381},
mesh = {*DNA Repair ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; New Mexico ; *Nobel Prize ; Sweden ; Turkey ; },
abstract = {This year's Nobel Prize for chemistry recognizes the seminal contributions of three researchers who discovered the existence and the basic mechanisms of DNA repair: base excision repair, mismatch repair, and nucleotide excision repair. They have since been joined by many scientists elucidating diverse aspects of these complex mechanisms that now constitute a thriving research field with many applications, notably for understanding oncogenesis and devising more effective therapies.},
}
@article {pmid26850308,
year = {2016},
author = {Buc, H},
title = {François Jacob, André Lwoff and Jacques Monod, fifty years after the Nobel Prize.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {167},
number = {3},
pages = {155-158},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2016.01.005},
pmid = {26850308},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; Biomedical Research/history/trends ; *Gene Expression Regulation ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/*trends ; Nobel Prize ; },
}
@article {pmid26850130,
year = {2016},
author = {Dutta, UR},
title = {The history of human cytogenetics in India-A review.},
journal = {Gene},
volume = {589},
number = {2},
pages = {112-117},
doi = {10.1016/j.gene.2016.01.052},
pmid = {26850130},
issn = {1879-0038},
mesh = {Chromosome Aberrations/*classification ; Chromosomes, Human/chemistry/*ultrastructure ; Comparative Genomic Hybridization/history/methods ; Cytogenetics/*history/methods ; Diagnostic Services/*history/organization & administration ; High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/history/methods ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence/history/methods ; India ; Karyotyping/history/methods ; },
abstract = {It is 60years since the discovery of the correct number of chromosomes in 1956; the field of cytogenetics had evolved. The late evolution of this field with respect to other fields is primarily due to the underdevelopment of lenses and imaging techniques. With the advent of the new technologies, especially automation and evolution of advanced compound microscopes, cytogenetics drastically leaped further to greater heights. This review describes the historic events that had led to the development of human cytogenetics with a special attention about the history of cytogenetics in India, its present status, and future. Apparently, this review provides a brief account into the insights of the early laboratory establishments, funding, and the German collaborations. The details of the Indian cytogeneticists establishing their labs, promoting the field, and offering the chromosomal diagnostic services are described. The detailed study of chromosomes helps in increasing the knowledge of the chromosome structure and function. The delineation of the chromosomal rearrangements using cytogenetics and molecular cytogenetic techniques pays way in identifying the molecular mechanisms involved in the chromosomal rearrangement. Although molecular cytogenetics is greatly developing, the conventional cytogenetics still remains the gold standard in the diagnosis of various numerical chromosomal aberrations and a few structural aberrations. The history of cytogenetics and its importance even in the era of molecular cytogenetics are discussed.},
}
@article {pmid26849117,
year = {2016},
author = {Ayub, Q and Mezzavilla, M and Pagani, L and Haber, M and Mohyuddin, A and Khaliq, S and Mehdi, SQ and Tyler-Smith, C},
title = {Response to Hellenthal et al.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {98},
number = {2},
pages = {398},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.12.024},
pmid = {26849117},
issn = {1537-6605},
mesh = {Chromosomes, Human, Y/*genetics ; DNA, Mitochondrial/*genetics ; *Genetic Drift ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Humans ; Male ; },
}
@article {pmid26849116,
year = {2016},
author = {Hellenthal, G and Falush, D and Myers, S and Reich, D and Busby, GB and Lipson, M and Capelli, C and Patterson, N},
title = {The Kalash Genetic Isolate? The Evidence for Recent Admixture.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {98},
number = {2},
pages = {396-397},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.12.025},
pmid = {26849116},
issn = {1537-6605},
support = {098386//Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom ; MR/M501608/1//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Chromosomes, Human, Y/*genetics ; DNA, Mitochondrial/*genetics ; *Genetic Drift ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Humans ; Male ; },
}
@article {pmid26839290,
year = {2018},
author = {Raff, HB},
title = {Julian Lewis (1946-2014): A 'serious hero'.},
journal = {Journal of medical biography},
volume = {26},
number = {1},
pages = {33-37},
doi = {10.1177/0967772016629012},
pmid = {26839290},
issn = {1758-1087},
mesh = {Cell Biology/*history ; Cell Communication ; England ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {Julian Lewis was a gifted medical researcher and writer. His early background was the Classics; then Physics and Math; finally, Molecular Cell Biology. He worked on important questions in early embryonic patterning and the cell communication system, and so cancer research, at King's College London, the Imperial Cancer Research Fund Oxford, and finally, Cancer Research UK London. He was a lifelong coauthor of the international textbook Molecular Biology of the Cell. His final personal battle with cancer was brave and not hidden. Awards included the Waddington Medal, a European Molecular Biology Organization membership, and a Fellowship of the Royal Society.},
}
@article {pmid26838313,
year = {2016},
author = {Patterson, K},
title = {Gerald W. Dorn II: Thinker, Teacher, Tinkerer.},
journal = {Circulation research},
volume = {118},
number = {2},
pages = {199-202},
doi = {10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.115.308213},
pmid = {26838313},
issn = {1524-4571},
mesh = {Animals ; Biomedical Research/*history ; Cardiology/*history ; Cardiovascular Diseases/genetics/*history ; Career Choice ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mentors/history ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26837547,
year = {2016},
author = {Majumder, PP},
title = {A Humanitarian and a Great Indian.},
journal = {Genome biology and evolution},
volume = {8},
number = {2},
pages = {467-469},
doi = {10.1093/gbe/evw012},
pmid = {26837547},
issn = {1759-6653},
mesh = {*Altruism ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; India ; United Kingdom ; },
}
@article {pmid26825396,
year = {2016},
author = {Deichmann, U},
title = {Interview with Eric Davidson.},
journal = {Developmental biology},
volume = {412},
number = {2 Suppl},
pages = {S20-9},
doi = {10.1016/j.ydbio.2016.01.021},
pmid = {26825396},
issn = {1095-564X},
mesh = {Animals ; Cell Biology/*history ; Developmental Biology/*history ; Gene Regulatory Networks ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Sea Urchins/embryology/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid26825394,
year = {2016},
author = {Cameron, RA},
title = {My time with Eric Davidson.},
journal = {Developmental biology},
volume = {412},
number = {2 Suppl},
pages = {S30},
doi = {10.1016/j.ydbio.2016.01.022},
pmid = {26825394},
issn = {1095-564X},
mesh = {Animals ; Developmental Biology/*history ; Gene Regulatory Networks ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid26800037,
year = {2016},
author = {Schwartz, MK},
title = {Recipient of the 2015 Molecular Ecology Prize: Fred Allendorf.},
journal = {Molecular ecology},
volume = {25},
number = {2},
pages = {450-453},
doi = {10.1111/mec.13503},
pmid = {26800037},
issn = {1365-294X},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Ecology/*history ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid26787897,
year = {2016},
author = {Berk, AJ},
title = {Discovery of RNA splicing and genes in pieces.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {113},
number = {4},
pages = {801-805},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1525084113},
pmid = {26787897},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Adenoviruses, Human/*genetics ; Animals ; Capsid Proteins/genetics ; DNA, Viral/genetics ; Evolution, Molecular ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Mammals/genetics ; Massachusetts ; Models, Genetic ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Nucleic Acid Hybridization ; RNA Isoforms/genetics/metabolism ; RNA Precursors/genetics/metabolism ; *RNA Splicing ; RNA, Heterogeneous Nuclear/genetics/*history/metabolism ; RNA, Messenger/biosynthesis/genetics/ultrastructure ; RNA, Viral/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid26783570,
year = {2015},
author = {Erwin, DH},
title = {Eric Davidson (1937–2015).},
journal = {Current biology : CB},
volume = {25},
number = {20},
pages = {R968-9},
pmid = {26783570},
issn = {1879-0445},
mesh = {Animals ; California ; *Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Sea Urchins/*genetics/*growth & development ; },
}
@article {pmid26775433,
year = {2015},
author = {de Chadarevian, S},
title = {Human population studies and the World Health Organization.},
journal = {Dynamis (Granada, Spain)},
volume = {35},
number = {2},
pages = {359-388},
pmid = {26775433},
issn = {0211-9536},
support = {/099392/Z/12/Z//Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Genetics, Population/*history ; *Heredity ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Infant, Newborn ; International Cooperation/history ; Politics ; Population Groups/*genetics ; Radiation Protection/*history ; Research ; World Health Organization/*history ; },
abstract = {This essay draws attention to the role of the WHO in shaping research agendas in the biomedical sciences in the postwar era. It considers in particular the genetic studies of human populations that were pursued under the aegis of the WHO from the late 1950s to 1970s. The study provides insights into how human and medical genetics entered the agenda of the WHO. At the same time, the population studies become a focus for tracking changing notions of international relations, cooperation, and development and their impact on research in biology and medicine in the post-World War I era. After a brief discussion of the early history of the WHO and its position in Cold War politics, the essay considers the WHO program in radiation protection and heredity and how the genetic study of "vanishing" human populations and a world-wide genetic study of newborns fitted this broader agenda. It then considers in more detail the kind of support offered by the WHO for these projects. The essay highlights the role of single individuals in taking advantage of WHO support for pushing their research agendas while establishing a trend towards cooperative international projects in biology.},
}
@article {pmid26775432,
year = {2015},
author = {Barahona, A},
title = {Transnational science and collaborative networks. The case of Genetics and Radiobiology in Mexico, 1950-1970.},
journal = {Dynamis (Granada, Spain)},
volume = {35},
number = {2},
pages = {333-358},
pmid = {26775432},
issn = {0211-9536},
mesh = {Animals ; Cytogenetics/*history ; Drosophila/*genetics ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Indians, North American/*genetics ; Mexico ; Radiobiology/*history ; },
abstract = {The transnational approach of the science and technology studies (S&TS) abandons the nation as a unit of analysis in order to understand the development of science history. It also abandons Euro-US-centred narratives in order to explain the role of international collaborative networks and the circulation of knowledge, people, artefacts and scientific practices. It is precisely under this perspective that the development of genetics and radiobiology in Mexico shall be analyzed, together with the pioneering work of the Mexican physician-turned-geneticist Alfonso León de Garay who spent two years in the Galton Laboratory in London under the supervision of Lionel Penrose. Upon his return de Garay funded the Genetics and Radiobiology Program of the National Commission of Nuclear Energy based on local needs and the aim of working beyond geographical limitations to thus facilitate the circulation of knowledge, practices and people. The three main lines of research conducted in the years after its foundation that were in line with international projects while responding to the national context were, first, cytogenetic studies of certain abnormalities, and the cytogenetics and anthropological studies of the Olympic Games held in Mexico in 1968; second, the study of the effects of radiation on hereditary material; and third, the study of population genetics in Drosophila and in Mexican indigenous groups. The program played a key role in reshaping the scientific careers of Mexican geneticists, and in transferring locally sourced research into broader networks. This case shows the importance of international collaborative networks and circulation in the constitution of national scientific elites, and also shows the national and transnational concerns that shaped local practices.},
}
@article {pmid26766743,
year = {2016},
author = {Hinman, V},
title = {Eric Davidson (1937-2015) and the past, present and future of EvoDevo.},
journal = {Evolution & development},
volume = {18},
number = {2},
pages = {67-68},
doi = {10.1111/ede.12180},
pmid = {26766743},
issn = {1525-142X},
mesh = {Biological Evolution ; California ; Developmental Biology/*history ; *Gene Expression Regulation ; Gene Regulatory Networks ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; RNA, Untranslated/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid26750602,
year = {2015},
author = {Morange, M},
title = {Pseudoalleles and Gene Complexes: The Search for the Elusive Link Between Genome Structure and Gene Function.},
journal = {Perspectives in biology and medicine},
volume = {58},
number = {2},
pages = {196-204},
doi = {10.1353/pbm.2015.0027},
pmid = {26750602},
issn = {1529-8795},
mesh = {*Alleles ; Animals ; Evolution, Molecular ; *Gene Expression Regulation ; *Genetic Loci ; *Genome ; Genomics/history/*methods ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Mice ; Models, Genetic ; Nucleic Acid Conformation ; *Pseudogenes ; Structure-Activity Relationship ; t-Complex Genome Region ; },
abstract = {After their discovery in the first decades of the 20th century, pseudo-alleles generated much interest among geneticists, because they apparently violated the conception of the genome as a collection of independent genes, a view elaborated by Thomas Morgan's group. This article focuses on two issues: the way the phenomenon of pseudoallelism suggests that the genome is more than a simple addition of independent genes, and the connection established between the formation of pseudoalleles during evolution and their functional roles. The article discusses the first explanations for the origin of pseudoalleles elaborated in the mid-1930s, the metabolic/developmental sequential model proposed by Ed Lewis in the 1950s, the disappointments encountered with the T-complex in the 1970s, and the fading of the previous models after the molecular characterization of the pseudoallelic gene complexes in the 1980s. Genomes are more than collections of genes, but their structures are the result of a complex evolutionary history that leaves no place for simplistic models.},
}
@article {pmid26750599,
year = {2015},
author = {Deichmann, U},
title = {Chromatin: Its history, current research, and the seminal researchers and their philosophy.},
journal = {Perspectives in biology and medicine},
volume = {58},
number = {2},
pages = {143-164},
doi = {10.1353/pbm.2015.0024},
pmid = {26750599},
issn = {1529-8795},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biomedical Research/history/trends ; Chromatin/chemistry/*metabolism ; *Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly ; Gene Expression Regulation ; *Genetics/history/trends ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Nucleic Acid Conformation ; Protein Conformation ; },
abstract = {The concept of chromatin as a complex of nucleic acid and proteins in the cell nucleus was developed by cytologists and biochemists in the late 19th century. It was the starting point for biochemical research on DNA and nuclear proteins. Although interest in chromatin declined rapidly at the beginning of the 20th century, a few decades later a new focus on chromatin emerged, which was not only related to its structure, but also to its function in gene regulatory processes in the development of higher organisms. Since the late 20th century, research on chromatin modifications has also been conducted under the label of epigenetics. This article highlights the major phases of chromatin research until the present time and introduces major investigators and their scientific and philosophical outlooks.},
}
@article {pmid26746705,
year = {2016},
author = {Fu, L},
title = {Shisan C. Chen and his research on goldfish genetics.},
journal = {Protein & cell},
volume = {7},
number = {2},
pages = {79-80},
doi = {10.1007/s13238-015-0236-3},
pmid = {26746705},
issn = {1674-8018},
mesh = {Animals ; China ; Genetics/*history ; Goldfish/*genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid26733664,
year = {2016},
author = {Ganetzky, B and Hawley, RS},
title = {The Centenary of GENETICS: Bridges to the Future.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {202},
number = {1},
pages = {15-23},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.180182},
pmid = {26733664},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Chromosomes ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Periodicals as Topic/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26733663,
year = {2016},
author = {Rosenberg, NA},
title = {Admixture Models and the Breeding Systems of H. S. Jennings: A GENETICS Connection.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {202},
number = {1},
pages = {9-13},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.181057},
pmid = {26733663},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Chromosomes ; Genetics/*history ; Periodicals as Topic/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26733662,
year = {2016},
author = {Coyne, JA},
title = {Theodosius Dobzhansky on Hybrid Sterility and Speciation.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {202},
number = {1},
pages = {5-7},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.184770},
pmid = {26733662},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; Books/*history ; Female ; *Genetic Speciation ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Hybridization, Genetic ; Infertility ; Male ; },
}
@article {pmid26733661,
year = {2016},
author = {Barton, NH},
title = {Sewall Wright on Evolution in Mendelian Populations and the "Shifting Balance".},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {202},
number = {1},
pages = {3-4},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.184796},
pmid = {26733661},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Models, Biological ; },
}
@article {pmid26733660,
year = {2016},
author = {Johnston, M},
title = {A New Century of GENETICS.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {202},
number = {1},
pages = {1-2},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.184804},
pmid = {26733660},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Periodicals as Topic/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26732271,
year = {2017},
author = {Loison, L and Gayon, J and Burian, RM},
title = {The Contributions - and Collapse - of Lamarckian Heredity in Pasteurian Molecular Biology: 1. Lysogeny, 1900-1960.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {50},
number = {1},
pages = {5-52},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-015-9434-3},
pmid = {26732271},
issn = {1573-0387},
mesh = {Bacteriophages/physiology ; France ; *Heredity ; History, 20th Century ; *Lysogeny ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {This article shows how Lamarckism was essential in the birth of the French school of molecular biology. We argue that the concept of inheritance of acquired characters positively shaped debates surrounding bacteriophagy and lysogeny in the Pasteurian tradition during the interwar period. During this period the typical Lamarckian account of heredity treated it as the continuation of protoplasmic physiology in daughter cells. Félix d'Hérelle applied this conception to argue that there was only one species of bacteriophage and Jules Bordet applied it to develop an account of bacteriophagy as a transmissible form of autolysis and to analyze the new phenomenon of lysogeny. In a long-standing controversy with Bordet, Eugène Wollman deployed a more morphological understanding of the inheritance of acquired characters, yielding a particulate, but still Lamarckian, account of lysogeny. We then turn to André Lwoff who, with several colleagues, completed Wollman's research program from 1949 to 1953. We examine how he gradually set aside the Lamarckian background, finally removing inheritance of acquired characters from the resulting account of bacteriophagy and lysogeny. In the conclusion, we emphasize the complex dual role of Lamarckism as it moved from an assumed explanatory framework to a challenge that the nascent molecular biology had to overcome.},
}
@article {pmid26729250,
year = {2016},
author = {Dunn, MJ and Kraus, HJ},
title = {PROTEOMICS: The first 15 years.},
journal = {Proteomics. Clinical applications},
volume = {10},
number = {1},
pages = {1-3},
doi = {10.1002/prca.201670013},
pmid = {26729250},
issn = {1862-8354},
mesh = {Animals ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Proteomics/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26728305,
year = {2016},
author = {},
title = {PROTEOMICS: The first 15 years.},
journal = {Proteomics},
volume = {16},
number = {1},
pages = {1-3},
doi = {10.1002/pmic.201670013},
pmid = {26728305},
issn = {1615-9861},
mesh = {Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional/history/methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Periodicals as Topic/history ; Proteome/analysis ; *Proteomics/history/methods ; },
}
@article {pmid29489121,
year = {2016},
author = {Kaasch, M and Kaasch, J},
title = {[In process.].},
journal = {Acta historica Leopoldina},
volume = {},
number = {65},
pages = {251-282},
pmid = {29489121},
issn = {0001-5857},
mesh = {Academies and Institutes/history ; Agriculture/history ; Botany/*history ; Dissent and Disputes/*history ; Faculty/history ; Genetics/*history ; Germany, East ; History, 20th Century ; Interprofessional Relations ; Plant Breeding/*history ; Research/history ; Research Support as Topic/history ; Universities/history ; },
abstract = {Two of the most important life scientists in the GDR were the botanist, plant biochemist and pharmacist Kurt MOTHES (1900-1983) and the geneticist and plant breeder Hans STUBBE (1902-1989). Both started their successful careers during the period of NS dictatorship. MOTHES was a full professor of botany at the University of K6nigsberg from 1935 to 1945. After working at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Plant Breeding Research in Mincheberg and at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Biology in Berlin-Dahlem, STUBBE oversaw the establishment of a Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Crop Plant Research near Vienna in 1943, which was moved to Stecklenberg in the Harz Mountains in 1945 and later to Gatersleben. While MOTHEs was being held as a Soviet prisoner of war from 1945 to 1949, STUBBE was able to set up his institute in Gatersleben in the eastern part of Germany and held influential positions at Martin Luther University in Halle (Saale) as a professor for genetics and as the founding dean of the Faculty of Agriculture. After his release from war captivity, MOTHES, with STUBBE'S support, was able to continue his research at STUBBE'S institute in Gatersleben as the head of the Department for Chemical Physiology. There MOTHES was offered espe- cially favourable conditions by East German standards which led him to turn down other job offers, like the position of professor of botany at the University of Leipzig which was vacant at the time. In addition, MOTHES was also of- fered teaching opportunities in the Faculty of Natural Sciences at the University of Halle, again thanks to STUBBE'S support. In 1951 STUBBE became a founding member and president of the German Academy of Agricultural Sciences at Berlin, and in 1954 MOTHEs became president of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina. Both were also influential members of the German Academy of Sciences at Berlin (later the GDR's Academy of Sciences). This article investigates how their collaboration developed into an ever-increasing competitiveness which came to a head as an embroiled dispute resulting from differences in scientific and scientific policy views. In the process a battle was fought over research resources so that, what was at first an apparently personal quarrel, affected the course of research promotion at an institutional level in the area of life sciences in the GDR. Despite several attempts at mediation, old age finally forced the adversaries to put aside their differences.},
}
@article {pmid26713337,
year = {2015},
author = {Kalantry, S and Mueller, JL},
title = {Mary Lyon: A Tribute.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {97},
number = {4},
pages = {507-510},
pmid = {26713337},
issn = {1537-6605},
support = {DP2 OD008646/OD/NIH HHS/United States ; R00 HD064753/HD/NICHD NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; United Kingdom ; },
}
@article {pmid26701753,
year = {2015},
author = {Alaggio, R and Coffin, CM},
title = {The Evolution of Pediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Classification in the Last 50 Years.},
journal = {Pediatric and developmental pathology : the official journal of the Society for Pediatric Pathology and the Paediatric Pathology Society},
volume = {18},
number = {6},
pages = {481-494},
doi = {10.2350/15-07-1666-MISC.1},
pmid = {26701753},
issn = {1093-5266},
mesh = {Adolescent ; Biomarkers, Tumor/genetics ; Child ; Fibrosarcoma/classification/pathology ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Diagnostic Techniques ; Muscle Neoplasms/*classification/genetics/history/*pathology ; Muscle, Skeletal/pathology ; Nerve Sheath Neoplasms/classification/pathology ; *Pathology, Molecular/history ; *Pediatrics/history ; Sarcoma/*classification/genetics/history/*pathology ; *Terminology as Topic ; },
abstract = {This review discusses the history of the classification of soft tissue sarcomas in children and adolescents, the current transition toward integration of morphology and molecular genetics as new entities emerge, and future perspectives.},
}
@article {pmid26701384,
year = {2015},
author = {Rogers, BB},
title = {The Evolution of the Polymerase Chain Reaction to Diagnose Childhood Infections.},
journal = {Pediatric and developmental pathology : the official journal of the Society for Pediatric Pathology and the Paediatric Pathology Society},
volume = {18},
number = {6},
pages = {495-503},
doi = {10.2350/15-05-1643-OA.1},
pmid = {26701384},
issn = {1093-5266},
mesh = {Bacterial Infections/*diagnosis/genetics/history/microbiology ; DNA, Bacterial/*genetics ; DNA, Viral/*genetics ; Diffusion of Innovation ; Equipment Design ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Molecular Diagnostic Techniques/history/instrumentation ; Pathology, Molecular/history/*methods ; Pediatrics/history/*methods ; Polymerase Chain Reaction/history/instrumentation/*methods ; Predictive Value of Tests ; Reproducibility of Results ; Virus Diseases/*diagnosis/genetics/history/virology ; },
abstract = {Children's healthcare has evolved over the years, and the pediatric laboratory has contributed to the clinical understanding of childhood disease through the application of new technology and knowledge. This article highlights the evolution of PCR technology to aid in the diagnosis of pediatric infections, from the discovery of the PCR, through the subsequent years when the clinical need exceeded the capability of the technology, until the current day, when application of the PCR is becoming commonplace.},
}
@article {pmid26700944,
year = {2016},
author = {Roberts, RM},
title = {In memoriam: Neal L. First 1930-2014.},
journal = {Biology of reproduction},
volume = {94},
number = {2},
pages = {47},
doi = {10.1095/biolreprod.115.138198},
pmid = {26700944},
issn = {1529-7268},
mesh = {Agriculture/*history ; Animals ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Wisconsin ; },
}
@article {pmid26699626,
year = {2016},
author = {Meunier, R},
title = {The many lives of experiments: Wilhelm Johannsen, selection, hybridization, and the complex relations of genes and characters.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {38},
number = {1},
pages = {42-64},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-015-0093-7},
pmid = {26699626},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Biological Evolution ; Fabaceae/*genetics ; Genetics/*history ; Heredity ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; *Hybridization, Genetic ; *Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {In addition to his experiments on selection in pure lines, Wilhelm Johannsen (1857-1927) performed less well-known hybridisation experiments with beans. This article describes these experiments and discusses Johannsen's motivations and interpretations, in the context of developments in early genetics. I will show that Johannsen first presented the hybridisation experiments as an additional control for his selection experiments. The latter were dedicated to investigating heredity with respect to debates concerning the significance of natural selection of continuous variation for evolution. In the course of the establishment of a Mendelian research program after 1900, the study of heredity gained increasing independence from questions of evolution, and focused more on the modes and mechanisms of heredity. Further to their role as control experiments, Johannsen also saw his hybridisation experiments as contributing to the Mendelian program, by extending the scope of the principles of Mendelian inheritance to quantitative characters. Towards the end of the first decade of genetics, Johannsen revisited his experiments to illustrate the many-many relationship between genes and characters, at a time when that relationship appeared increasingly complex, and the unit-character concept, accordingly, became inadequate. For the philosophy of science, the example shows that experiments can have multiple roles in a research programme, and can be interpreted in the light of questions other than those that motivated the experiments in the first place.},
}
@article {pmid26677577,
year = {2015},
author = {Kierdaszuk, B},
title = {[Role of tautomerism in the molecular mechanisms of mutagenesis].},
journal = {Postepy biochemii},
volume = {61},
number = {3},
pages = {298-304},
pmid = {26677577},
issn = {0032-5422},
mesh = {Adenine/*analogs & derivatives/chemistry/history/metabolism ; *Base Pairing ; Biochemistry/*history ; Cytosine/*analogs & derivatives/chemistry/history/metabolism ; DNA/chemistry/history ; DNA Damage ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Hydrogen Bonding ; Isomerism ; *Mutagenesis ; Point Mutation ; Poland ; },
abstract = {Environment of human being usually contains a high number of environmental mutagens, which may modify chemically nucleic acid bases into promutagenic analogues. Hydroxylamine (NH2OH) is a strong mutagen which modifies cytosine and adenine to N4-hydroxycytosine and N6-hydroxyadenine, respectively. Once these analogues are present in DNA or RNA, they may cause transition point mutations by the exchange between two pairs C:G and A:T into T:A and G:C, respectively. The reason for these mutations is the change of preferences between intermolecular hydrogen bonds resulting from the shift of the tautomeric equilibrium from the preferred amino form into the imino one. In the case of the aminoimino tautomeric equilibrium of N6-hydroxyadenosine, it was also shown that preferential hydrogen bonding between its imino form and cytidine, or uridine and the amino form of this base leads to the shift of the tautomeric equilibrium in favour of these tautomers in solution. N4-hydroxy-dCMP analogues exhibited very interesting inhibitory properties versus the biosynthesis of dTMP catalyzed by thymidylate synthase. These properties help to further the knowledge on the molecular mechanism of the catalytic reaction of this enzyme as well as on the role of syn-anti photoisomerization of the N4-hydroxy group in this reaction. Examinations gathered in the article were conducted from 1979 to 1985 under supervision, and afterwards from 1986 to 2004 in collaboration with professor David Shugar.},
}
@article {pmid26677572,
year = {2015},
author = {Piechowska, M},
title = {[Genetic transformation and fate of heterological DNA in bacterial cells].},
journal = {Postepy biochemii},
volume = {61},
number = {3},
pages = {256-259},
pmid = {26677572},
issn = {0032-5422},
mesh = {Bacillus/genetics ; Bacteriophages/genetics ; DNA, Bacterial/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Poland ; Streptococcus/genetics ; *Transformation, Genetic ; },
abstract = {Secretion of a metabolite enabling Streptococci to undergo genetic transformation was discovered. The metabolite combined with an optimization process were applied to increase the transformation yield about 20-fold. It was observed that large amounts of DNA exert a bactericidal effect, indicating the ability of at least 70% of cells to uptake the polymer. While studying the molecular mechanism of transformation of Bacillus subtilis it was shown that the uptaken DNA forms complexes with bacterial proteins, which hinders determination of its structure. A method was found to dissociate these complexes which enabled to determine the single-stranded structure of the uptaken DNA. Donor DNA fragments incorporated into the host DNA were of about 10 Da. Non-transforming DNA can be uptaken similarly but does not undergo incorporation into the host DNA. The selectivity of Bacillus subtilis receptors was determined towards DNA of phages containing modified bases: uracil, putrescinyl-thymine and its acetylated derivative, 5'-hydroxymethylcytosine and its glycosylated derivative and also towards double-stranded RNA of f2 phage. All these modifications were tolerated by the cellular receptors, with the exception of glycosylation and the 2'-OH group in RNA.},
}
@article {pmid26677566,
year = {2015},
author = {Wierzchowski, KL},
title = {[100th Anniversary of Professor David Shugar].},
journal = {Postepy biochemii},
volume = {61},
number = {3},
pages = {234-235},
pmid = {26677566},
issn = {0032-5422},
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; Biophysics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Poland ; },
}
@article {pmid26672357,
year = {2015},
author = {Jin, C},
title = {[Glycotechnology in China].},
journal = {Sheng wu gong cheng xue bao = Chinese journal of biotechnology},
volume = {31},
number = {6},
pages = {797-804},
pmid = {26672357},
issn = {1000-3061},
mesh = {Biotechnology ; China ; Glycomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
abstract = {Glycotechnology is a new branch of biotechnology, emerged early 1990's. In this article, the international background of glycotechnology is briefly introduced and history of glycotechnology in China is reviewed.},
}
@article {pmid26671265,
year = {2016},
author = {Dietrich, MR},
title = {Experimenting with sex: four approaches to the genetics of sex reversal before 1950.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {38},
number = {1},
pages = {23-41},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-015-0092-8},
pmid = {26671265},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Animals ; Female ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Male ; *Models, Biological ; *Sex Determination Processes ; },
abstract = {In the early twentieth century, Tatsuo Aida in Japan, Øjvind Winge in Denmark, Richard Goldschmidt in Germany, and Calvin Bridges in the United States all developed different experimental systems to study the genetics of sex reversal. These locally specific experimental systems grounded these experimenters' understanding of sex reversal as well as their interpretation of claims regarding experimental results and theories. The comparison of four researchers and their experimental systems reveals how those different systems mediated their understanding of genetic phenomena, and influenced their interpretations of sex reversal.},
}
@article {pmid26667849,
year = {2016},
author = {Jeggo, PA and Pearl, LH and Carr, AM},
title = {DNA repair, genome stability and cancer: a historical perspective.},
journal = {Nature reviews. Cancer},
volume = {16},
number = {1},
pages = {35-42},
doi = {10.1038/nrc.2015.4},
pmid = {26667849},
issn = {1474-1768},
support = {G1100074//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; C302/A14532//Cancer Research UK/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Animals ; DNA Repair/*physiology ; Genetic Research/*history ; Genomic Instability/*physiology ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Neoplasms/genetics/*history/pathology ; },
abstract = {The multistep process of cancer progresses over many years. The prevention of mutations by DNA repair pathways led to an early appreciation of a role for repair in cancer avoidance. However, the broader role of the DNA damage response (DDR) emerged more slowly. In this Timeline article, we reflect on how our understanding of the steps leading to cancer developed, focusing on the role of the DDR. We also consider how our current knowledge can be exploited for cancer therapy.},
}
@article {pmid26651239,
year = {2016},
author = {Liu, Y and Li, X},
title = {Darwin and Mendel today: a comment on "Limits of imagination: the 150th Anniversary of Mendel's Laws, and why Mendel failed to see the importance of his discovery for Darwin's theory of evolution".},
journal = {Genome},
volume = {59},
number = {1},
pages = {75-77},
doi = {10.1139/gen-2015-0155},
pmid = {26651239},
issn = {1480-3321},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; Genetic Research/*history ; *Imagination ; *Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {We comment on a recent paper by Rama Singh, who concludes that Mendel deserved to be called the father of genetics, and Darwin would not have understood the significance of Mendel's paper had he read it. We argue that Darwin should have been regarded as the father of genetics not only because he was the first to formulate a unifying theory of heredity, variation, and development -- Pangenesis, but also because he clearly described almost all genetical phenomena of fundamental importance, including what he called "prepotency" and what we now call "dominance" or "Mendelian inheritance". The word "gene" evolved from Darwin's imagined "gemmules", instead of Mendel's so-called "factors".},
}
@article {pmid26632584,
year = {2015},
author = {Rohwer, F and Segall, AM},
title = {In retrospect: A century of phage lessons.},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {528},
number = {7580},
pages = {46-48},
doi = {10.1038/528046a},
pmid = {26632584},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {*Bacteriophages/genetics/immunology/pathogenicity/physiology ; CRISPR-Cas Systems/genetics ; Cyanobacteria/genetics/metabolism/virology ; Evolution, Molecular ; Gene Transfer, Horizontal/genetics ; Genome, Viral/genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Host-Pathogen Interactions/genetics ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Mutagenesis/genetics ; Neoplasms/genetics/pathology ; Oncogenes/genetics ; Photosynthesis ; Sequence Analysis, DNA/history ; Synthetic Biology/trends ; },
}
@article {pmid26631162,
year = {2016},
author = {Friedman, B and Hughes, A},
title = {Austin L. Hughes 1949-2015.},
journal = {Immunogenetics},
volume = {68},
number = {1},
pages = {1},
doi = {10.1007/s00251-015-0886-6},
pmid = {26631162},
issn = {1432-1211},
mesh = {Animals ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Immunogenetics/*history ; Vertebrates/genetics/immunology ; },
}
@article {pmid26620108,
year = {2015},
author = {Wharton, K},
title = {William Martin Gelbart 1945-2015.},
journal = {Nature genetics},
volume = {47},
number = {12},
pages = {1372},
doi = {10.1038/ng.3455},
pmid = {26620108},
issn = {1546-1718},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; *Biomedical Research ; Genetics/*history ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid26619767,
year = {2015},
author = {Métneki, J},
title = {Professor Andrew E. Czeizel, Hungary (April 3, 1935-August 10, 2015).},
journal = {Twin research and human genetics : the official journal of the International Society for Twin Studies},
volume = {18},
number = {6},
pages = {819-822},
doi = {10.1017/thg.2015.79},
pmid = {26619767},
issn = {1832-4274},
mesh = {Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Hungary ; },
}
@article {pmid26612012,
year = {2016},
author = {Ács, N and Bánhidy, F and Sankaranarayanan, K and Merhala, Z},
title = {Obituary.},
journal = {The journal of maternal-fetal & neonatal medicine : the official journal of the European Association of Perinatal Medicine, the Federation of Asia and Oceania Perinatal Societies, the International Society of Perinatal Obstetricians},
volume = {29},
number = {1},
pages = {169-171},
doi = {10.3109/14767058.2015.1121952},
pmid = {26612012},
issn = {1476-4954},
mesh = {Epidemiology/history ; Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Hungary ; *Registries ; Teratology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26606830,
year = {2015},
author = {Evgen'ev, MB},
title = {[Vladimir Igorevich Mitrofanov].},
journal = {Ontogenez},
volume = {46},
number = {5},
pages = {360},
pmid = {26606830},
issn = {0475-1450},
mesh = {Animals ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Portraits as Topic ; Russia ; },
}
@article {pmid26605641,
year = {2015},
author = {Ruggieri, M},
title = {Molecular Medicine Commemorates the Achievements of the First 20 Years.},
journal = {Molecular medicine (Cambridge, Mass.)},
volume = {21 Suppl 1},
number = {},
pages = {S1-2},
doi = {10.2119/molmed.2015.00216},
pmid = {26605641},
issn = {1528-3658},
mesh = {*Achievement ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Medicine/*history/trends ; Periodicals as Topic ; },
}
@article {pmid26582793,
year = {2015},
author = {Viegas, J},
title = {QnAs with Jeannie T. Lee.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {112},
number = {48},
pages = {14745-14746},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1521185112},
pmid = {26582793},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Animals ; Female ; Gene Silencing ; Genetic Research ; Genetics/history ; Genomic Imprinting ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Male ; Mice ; *RNA, Long Noncoding/genetics ; X Chromosome Inactivation/*genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid26564398,
year = {2016},
author = {Lockshin, RA},
title = {Programmed cell death 50 (and beyond).},
journal = {Cell death and differentiation},
volume = {23},
number = {1},
pages = {10-17},
doi = {10.1038/cdd.2015.126},
pmid = {26564398},
issn = {1476-5403},
mesh = {Apoptosis/*genetics ; Autophagy/*genetics ; *Cellular Microenvironment ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
abstract = {In the 50 years since we described cell death as 'programmed,' we have come far, thanks to the efforts of many brilliant researchers, and we now understand the mechanics, the biochemistry, and the genetics of many of the ways in which cells can die. This knowledge gives us the resources to alter the fates of many cells. However, not all cells respond similarly to the same stimulus, in either sensitivity to the stimulus or timing of the response. Cells prevented from dying through one pathway may survive, survive in a crippled state, or die following a different pathway. To fully capitalize on our knowledge of cell death, we need to understand much more about how cells are targeted to die and what aspects of the history, metabolism, or resources available to individual cells determine how each cell reaches and crosses the threshold at which it commits to death.},
}
@article {pmid26558946,
year = {2015},
author = {Ribatti, D},
title = {Jacques Monod and Chance and Necessity.},
journal = {Critical reviews in eukaryotic gene expression},
volume = {25},
number = {3},
pages = {239-243},
pmid = {26558946},
issn = {1045-4403},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {Charles Darwin proposed the theory that evolution of live organisms is based on random variation and natural selection. Jacques Monod, in his classic book Chance and Necessity, published 45 years ago, presented his thesis that the biosphere does not contain a predictable class of objects or events, but constitutes a particular occurrence, compatible indeed with the first principles but not deducible from those principles. The biosphere is therefore essentially unpredictable. In his book, Monod expounded at length on the conflict between science and religion. He saw religion as a collection of primitive myths that had been blown to shreds by science. At every turn, Monod emphasized the role of chance in human existence, an idea that is antithetical to essentially every religious doctrine that places humans as some inevitable intention of a Creator.},
}
@article {pmid26548914,
year = {2015},
author = {Loman, NJ and Pallen, MJ},
title = {Twenty years of bacterial genome sequencing.},
journal = {Nature reviews. Microbiology},
volume = {13},
number = {12},
pages = {787-794},
doi = {10.1038/nrmicro3565},
pmid = {26548914},
issn = {1740-1534},
support = {BB/E011179/1//Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council/United Kingdom ; MR/J014370/1//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; MR/M501621/1//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; MR/L015080/1//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {DNA, Bacterial/*chemistry/*genetics ; *Genome, Bacterial ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Epidemiology/history/methods/trends ; Molecular Typing/history/methods/trends ; Sequence Analysis, DNA/*history/*methods/trends ; },
abstract = {Twenty years ago, the publication of the first bacterial genome sequence, from Haemophilus influenzae, shook the world of bacteriology. In this Timeline, we review the first two decades of bacterial genome sequencing, which have been marked by three revolutions: whole-genome shotgun sequencing, high-throughput sequencing and single-molecule long-read sequencing. We summarize the social history of sequencing and its impact on our understanding of the biology, diversity and evolution of bacteria, while also highlighting spin-offs and translational impact in the clinic. We look forward to a 'sequencing singularity', where sequencing becomes the method of choice for as-yet unthinkable applications in bacteriology and beyond.},
}
@article {pmid26548913,
year = {2015},
author = {Salmond, GP and Fineran, PC},
title = {A century of the phage: past, present and future.},
journal = {Nature reviews. Microbiology},
volume = {13},
number = {12},
pages = {777-786},
doi = {10.1038/nrmicro3564},
pmid = {26548913},
issn = {1740-1534},
support = {BB/G000298/1//Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council/United Kingdom ; BB/H002677/1//Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council/United Kingdom ; //Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Bacteria/pathogenicity/*virology ; Bacteriophages/genetics/*isolation & purification/*physiology ; Biological Therapy/*history/methods/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history/methods/trends ; Virology/*history/methods/trends ; },
abstract = {Viruses that infect bacteria (bacteriophages; also known as phages) were discovered 100 years ago. Since then, phage research has transformed fundamental and translational biosciences. For example, phages were crucial in establishing the central dogma of molecular biology - information is sequentially passed from DNA to RNA to proteins - and they have been shown to have major roles in ecosystems, and help drive bacterial evolution and virulence. Furthermore, phage research has provided many techniques and reagents that underpin modern biology - from sequencing and genome engineering to the recent discovery and exploitation of CRISPR-Cas phage resistance systems. In this Timeline, we discuss a century of phage research and its impact on basic and applied biology.},
}
@article {pmid26544139,
year = {2015},
author = {Miller, HI},
title = {Recasting Asilomar's lessons for human germline editing.},
journal = {Nature biotechnology},
volume = {33},
number = {11},
pages = {1132-1134},
doi = {10.1038/nbt.3402},
pmid = {26544139},
issn = {1546-1696},
mesh = {Gene Transfer Techniques ; *Genetic Research/history/legislation & jurisprudence ; *Genetic Therapy/history/legislation & jurisprudence ; Germ Cells ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26540846,
year = {2015},
author = {Pai-Dhungat, JV},
title = {John Gregor Mendel (1822-1884).},
journal = {The Journal of the Association of Physicians of India},
volume = {63},
number = {3},
pages = {60-61},
pmid = {26540846},
issn = {0004-5772},
mesh = {Czech Republic ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; *Philately ; },
}
@article {pmid26526394,
year = {2016},
author = {Ács, N and Bánhidy, F and Sankaranarayanan, K and Merhala, Z},
title = {Andrew E. Czeizel, 3 April 1935-10 August 2015.},
journal = {Congenital anomalies},
volume = {56},
number = {1},
pages = {4-5},
doi = {10.1111/cga.12141},
pmid = {26526394},
issn = {1741-4520},
mesh = {Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Hungary ; },
}
@article {pmid26524588,
year = {2015},
author = {Smithies, O and Neill, US},
title = {A conversation with Oliver Smithies.},
journal = {The Journal of clinical investigation},
volume = {125},
number = {11},
pages = {3997-3998},
doi = {10.1172/JCI84087},
pmid = {26524588},
issn = {1558-8238},
support = {R01 HL049277/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Electrophoresis, Starch Gel/history ; England ; Gene Targeting/*history/methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Homologous Recombination ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; *Nobel Prize ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26516638,
year = {2015},
author = {Haig, D},
title = {David Haig.},
journal = {Current biology : CB},
volume = {25},
number = {16},
pages = {R700-2},
pmid = {26516638},
issn = {1879-0445},
mesh = {Australia ; *Biological Evolution ; *Conflict (Psychology) ; Ethology/*history ; Genetics, Behavioral/*history ; *Genomic Imprinting ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26502659,
year = {2015},
author = {Iida, K},
title = {A controversial idea as a cultural resource: The Lysenko controversy and discussions of genetics as a 'democratic' science in postwar Japan.},
journal = {Social studies of science},
volume = {45},
number = {4},
pages = {546-569},
doi = {10.1177/0306312715596460},
pmid = {26502659},
issn = {0306-3127},
mesh = {Democracy ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Japan ; Societies, Scientific/history ; USSR ; },
abstract = {The Japanese discussion of the theory of Soviet agronomist Trofim D. Lysenko began in the postwar years under the American occupation. Leftists introduced Lysenko's theory immediately after the war as part of a postwar scientists' movement. Unlike many American geneticists, who sharply criticized the theory, Japanese geneticists initially participated in the discussion in an even-handed way; their scientific interests in the roles of cytoplasm and the environment in heredity shaped their initial sympathetic reaction. As the Cold War divide deepened, however, Japanese scientists began expressing sharp anti-Lysenko criticisms that resembled the American criticisms. Interestingly, throughout the period, Japanese geneticists' overall aim in the discussion remained largely unchanged: to effectively reconstruct their discipline and maintain its proper image and authority. However, the shift in their reaction occurred due to an evolving sociopolitical context, especially the shift in the meaning of 'democratic' science from a science that employed democratic processes to a science of a liberal-democratic state. Regarding Lysenko's idea as a cultural resource could help to explain how and why it was treated differently in different places, and why a controversy emerged in certain contexts but not in others.},
}
@article {pmid26499244,
year = {2015},
author = {Hood, L and Rothenberg, EV},
title = {Developmental biologist Eric H. Davidson, 1937-2015.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {112},
number = {44},
pages = {13423-13425},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1518876112},
pmid = {26499244},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Animals ; Developmental Biology/*history ; Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ; *Gene Regulatory Networks ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Strongylocentrotus purpuratus/embryology/*genetics ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26486645,
year = {2016},
author = {Maienschein, J},
title = {Garland Allen, Thomas Hunt Morgan, and Development.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {49},
number = {4},
pages = {587-601},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-015-9426-3},
pmid = {26486645},
issn = {1573-0387},
mesh = {Animals ; Biography as Topic ; Biology/*history ; Genetics/*history ; Growth and Development ; Historiography ; History, 20th Century ; Nobel Prize ; Regeneration ; United States ; },
abstract = {Garland E. Allen's 1978 biography of the Nobel Prize winning biologist Thomas Hunt Morgan provides an excellent study of the man and his science. Allen presents Morgan as an opportunistic scientist who follows where his observations take him, leading him to his foundational work in Drosophila genetics. The book was rightfully hailed as an important achievement and it introduced generations of readers to Morgan. Yet, in hindsight, Allen's book largely misses an equally important part of Morgan's work - his study of development and regeneration. It is worth returning to this part of Morgan, exploring what Morgan contributed and also why he has been seen by contemporaries and historians such as Allen as having set aside some of the most important developmental problems. A closer look shows how Morgan's view of cells and development that was different from that of his most noted contemporaries led to interpretation of his important contributions in favor of genetics. This essay is part of a special issue, revisiting Garland Allen's views on the history of life sciences in the twentieth century.},
}
@article {pmid26471927,
year = {2015},
author = {Witteveen, J},
title = {"A temporary oversimplification": Mayr, Simpson, Dobzhansky, and the origins of the typology/population dichotomy (part 1 of 2).},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {54},
number = {},
pages = {20-33},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2015.09.007},
pmid = {26471927},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Biological Evolution ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Philosophy/*history ; },
abstract = {The dichotomy between 'typological thinking' and 'population thinking' features in a range of debates in contemporary and historical biology. The origins of this dichotomy are often traced to Ernst Mayr, who is said to have coined it in the 1950s as a rhetorical device that could be used to shield the Modern Synthesis from attacks by the opponents of population biology. In this two-part essay I argue that the origins of the typology/population dichotomy are considerably more complicated and more interesting than is commonly thought. In this first part, I will argue that Mayr's dichotomy was based on two distinct type/population contrasts that had been articulated much earlier by George Gaylord Simpson and Theodosius Dobzhansky. Their distinctions made eminent sense in their own, isolated contexts. In the second part, I will show how Mayr conflated these type/population distinctions and blended in some of his own, unrelated concerns with 'types' of a rather different sort. Although Mayr told his early critics that he was merely making "a temporary oversimplification," he ended up burdening the history and philosophy of biology with a troubled dichotomy.},
}
@article {pmid26471926,
year = {2016},
author = {Witteveen, J},
title = {"A temporary oversimplification": Mayr, Simpson, Dobzhansky, and the origins of the typology/population dichotomy (part 2 of 2).},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {57},
number = {},
pages = {96-105},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2015.09.006},
pmid = {26471926},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Biological Evolution ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Philosophy/*history ; },
abstract = {The dichotomy between 'typological thinking' and 'population thinking' features in a range of debates in contemporary and historical biology. The origins of this dichotomy are often traced to Ernst Mayr, who is said to have coined it in the 1950s as a rhetorical device that could be used to shield the Modern Synthesis from attacks by the opponents of population biology. In this two-part essay, I argue that the origins of the typology/population dichotomy are considerably more complicated and more interesting than is commonly thought. In the first part, I argued that Mayr's dichotomy was based on two distinct type/population contrasts that had been articulated much earlier by George Gaylord Simpson and Theodosius Dobzhansky. Their distinctions made eminent sense in their own, isolated contexts. In this second part, I will show how Mayr conflated these type/population distinctions and blended in some of his own, unrelated concerns with 'types' of a rather different sort. Although Mayr told his early critics that he was merely making "a temporary oversimplification," he ended up burdening the history and philosophy of biology with a troubled dichotomy.},
}
@article {pmid26471494,
year = {2016},
author = {Erlingsson, SJ},
title = {"Enfant Terrible": Lancelot Hogben's Life and Work in the 1920s.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {49},
number = {3},
pages = {495-526},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-015-9427-2},
pmid = {26471494},
issn = {1573-0387},
mesh = {Animals ; Depressive Disorder/history ; *Environment ; Genetics/history ; *Heredity ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Male ; South Africa ; United Kingdom ; Zoology/*history ; },
abstract = {Until recently the British zoologist Lancelot Hogben (1895-1975) has usually appeared as a campaigning socialist, an anti-eugenicist or a popularizer of science in the literature. The focus has mainly been on Hogben after he became a professor of social biology at the London School of Economics in 1930. This paper focuses on Hogben's life in the 1920s. Early in the decade, while based in London, he focused on cytology, but in 1922, after moving to Edinburgh, he turned his focus on experimental zoology, first concentrating on vertebrate endocrinology and later moving over to the comparative physiology of invertebrate muscle. In the early 1920s Hogben played an active role in the development of experimental zoology in Britain. As such he was a fearless critic of evolutionary and metaphysical speculations. But in this period Hogben's career prospects were seriously hampered by his confrontational nature and serious depression. As a result he was forced to leave Britain in 1925. He first accepted a position in Canada and in the period 1927-1930 he was a professor of zoology in South Africa. This paper will also add crucial new material to James Tabery's recent discussion of the history behind Hogben's ideas about the interaction of heredity and environment in individual development. In addition a previously unknown Lamarckian controversy will be discussed.},
}
@article {pmid26469070,
year = {2015},
author = {Gitschier, J},
title = {Your Data to Explore: An Interview with Anne Wojcicki.},
journal = {PLoS genetics},
volume = {11},
number = {10},
pages = {e1005548},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pgen.1005548},
pmid = {26469070},
issn = {1553-7404},
mesh = {Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid26463979,
year = {2015},
author = {Mount, SM and Wolin, SL},
title = {Recognizing the 35th anniversary of the proposal that snRNPs are involved in splicing.},
journal = {Molecular biology of the cell},
volume = {26},
number = {20},
pages = {3557-3560},
doi = {10.1091/mbc.E14-10-1486},
pmid = {26463979},
issn = {1939-4586},
support = {R01 GM073863/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; R01GM073863/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; Anniversaries and Special Events ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; RNA Splicing/genetics ; RNA, Messenger/genetics ; Ribonucleoproteins, Small Nuclear/*genetics/*history ; Spliceosomes/genetics ; },
abstract = {Thirty-five years ago, as young graduate students, we had the pleasure and privilege of being in Joan Steitz's laboratory at a pivotal point in the history of RNA molecular biology. Introns had recently been discovered in the laboratories of Philip Sharp and Richard Roberts, but the machinery for removing them from mRNA precursors was entirely unknown. This Retrospective describes our hypothesis that recently discovered snRNPs functioned in pre-mRNA splicing. The proposal was proven correct, as has Joan's intuition that small RNAs provide specificity to RNA processing reactions through base pairing in diverse settings. However, research over the intervening years has revealed that both splice site selection and splicing itself are much more complex and dynamic than we imagined.},
}
@article {pmid26463495,
year = {2016},
author = {Farber, PL},
title = {Dobzhansky and Montagu's Debate on Race: The Aftermath.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {49},
number = {4},
pages = {625-639},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-015-9428-1},
pmid = {26463495},
issn = {1573-0387},
mesh = {Anthropology/history ; Biological Evolution ; Biological Science Disciplines/*history ; *Continental Population Groups/genetics ; Dissent and Disputes/*history ; Genomics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
abstract = {Dobzhansky and Montagu debated the use and validity of the term "race" over a period of decades. They failed to reach an agreement, and the "debate" has continued to the present. The ms contains an account of the debate to the present. This essay is part of a Special Issue, Revisiting Garland Allen's Views on the History of the Life Sciences in the Twentieth Century.},
}
@article {pmid26459668,
year = {2016},
author = {García-Sancho, M},
title = {The proactive historian: Methodological opportunities presented by the new archives documenting genomics.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {55},
number = {},
pages = {70-82},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2015.09.005},
pmid = {26459668},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {*Archives/history ; Genomics/*history ; Historiography ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/history/organization & administration ; Humans ; Records as Topic ; },
abstract = {In this paper, I propose a strategy for navigating newly available archives in the study of late-twentieth century genomics. I demonstrate that the alleged 'explosion of data' characteristic of genomics-and of contemporary science in general-is not a new problem and that historians of earlier periods have dealt with information overload by relying on the 'perspective of time': the filtering effect the passage of time naturally exerts on both sources and memories. I argue that this reliance on the selective capacity of time results in inheriting archives curated by others and, consequently, poses the risk of reifying ahistorical scientific discourses. Through a preliminary examination of archives documenting early attempts at mapping and sequencing the human genome, I propose an alternative approach, in which historians proactively problematize and improve available sources. This approach provides historians with a voice in the socio-political management of scientific heritage and advances methodological innovations in the use of oral histories. It also provides a narrative framework in which to address big science initiatives by following second order administrators, rather than individual scientists. The new genomic archives thus represent an opportunity for historians to take an active role in current debates concerning 'big data' and critically embed the humanities in pressing global problems.},
}
@article {pmid26456508,
year = {2016},
author = {Lindee, S},
title = {Human genetics after the bomb: Archives, clinics, proving grounds and board rooms.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {55},
number = {},
pages = {45-53},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2015.09.001},
pmid = {26456508},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Archives/*history ; Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics/history ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; Genomics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Japan ; Nuclear Weapons/*history ; Radiation Injuries/genetics/history ; United States ; },
abstract = {In this paper I track the history of post-1945 human genetics and genomics emphasizing the importance of ideas about risk to the scientific study and medical management of human heredity. Drawing on my own scholarship as it is refracted through important new work by other scholars both junior and senior, I explore how radiation risk and then later disease risk mattered to the development of genetics and genomics, particularly in the United States. In this context I excavate one of the central ironies of post-war human genetics: while studies of DNA as the origin and cause of diseases have been lavishly supported by public institutions and private investment around the world, the day-to-day labor of intensive clinical innovation has played a far more important role in the actual human experience of genetic disease and genetic risk for affected families. This has implications for the archival record, where clinical interactions are less readily accessible to historians. This paper then suggests that modern genomics grew out of radiation risk; that it was and remains a risk assessment science; that it is temporally embedded as a form of both prediction and historical reconstruction; and that it has become a big business focused more on risk and prediction (which can be readily marketed) than on effective clinical intervention.},
}
@article {pmid26450889,
year = {2015},
author = {Bolli, R},
title = {Editor's Preamble to the Profile of Eric Olson.},
journal = {Circulation research},
volume = {117},
number = {9},
pages = {e66},
doi = {10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.115.307564},
pmid = {26450889},
issn = {1524-4571},
mesh = {Cardiology/history ; Heart ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Muscle Development/*genetics ; Myocardium/*metabolism ; Texas ; },
}
@article {pmid26450195,
year = {2015},
author = {Radick, G},
title = {HISTORY OF SCIENCE. Beyond the "Mendel-Fisher controversy".},
journal = {Science (New York, N.Y.)},
volume = {350},
number = {6257},
pages = {159-160},
doi = {10.1126/science.aab3846},
pmid = {26450195},
issn = {1095-9203},
mesh = {Breeding/*history/statistics & numerical data ; Chi-Square Distribution ; Data Interpretation, Statistical ; Evaluation Studies as Topic ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics/*history/statistics & numerical data ; History, 19th Century ; Peas/genetics ; Scientific Misconduct/*history/statistics & numerical data ; },
}
@article {pmid26450050,
year = {2015},
author = {Cameron, A},
title = {Eric H. Davidson (1937-2015).},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {526},
number = {7572},
pages = {196},
doi = {10.1038/526196a},
pmid = {26450050},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {Animals ; Cell Differentiation/genetics ; *Gene Regulatory Networks ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Systems Biology/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26447131,
year = {2015},
author = {Kaufman, T},
title = {In Memoriam William Martin Gelbart (1945-2015).},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {201},
number = {2},
pages = {809-810},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.182238},
pmid = {26447131},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; Drosophila melanogaster/genetics ; Genetics/*history ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid26443532,
year = {2015},
author = {Fishkin, CA},
title = {Remembering J. A. Cifonelli (1916-2005) An Early Leader in Glycosaminoglycan Biochemistry.},
journal = {Glycobiology},
volume = {25},
number = {11},
pages = {1139-1141},
doi = {10.1093/glycob/cwv085},
pmid = {26443532},
issn = {1460-2423},
mesh = {Glycomics/*history ; Glycosaminoglycans/*metabolism ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26443531,
year = {2015},
author = {West, CM},
title = {The 2015 Karl Meyer Lectureship Award and the Rosalind Kornfeld Award for Lifetime Achievement in Glycobiology, from the Society for Glycobiology.},
journal = {Glycobiology},
volume = {25},
number = {11},
pages = {1137-1138},
doi = {10.1093/glycob/cwv086},
pmid = {26443531},
issn = {1460-2423},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Glycomics/*history/organization & administration ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Societies, Scientific ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26440511,
year = {2015},
author = {Sen-Chowdhry, S and McKenna, WJ},
title = {Standing on the Shoulders of Giants: J.A.P. Paré and the Birth of Cardiovascular Genetics.},
journal = {The Canadian journal of cardiology},
volume = {31},
number = {11},
pages = {1305-1308},
doi = {10.1016/j.cjca.2015.05.026},
pmid = {26440511},
issn = {1916-7075},
support = {FS/10/011/27881//British Heart Foundation/United Kingdom ; //British Heart Foundation/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Cardiovascular Diseases/*genetics/*history ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Quebec ; },
abstract = {Sudden death and stroke afflicted a family from rural Quebec with such frequency as to be called the Coaticook curse by the local community. In Montreal in the late 1950s, a team of physicians led by J.A.P. Paré investigated this family for inherited cardiovascular disease. Their efforts resulted in an extensive and now classic description of familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. A quarter of a century later, the same family was the subject of linkage analysis and direct sequencing, culminating in the isolation of a mutation in the gene encoding the β myosin heavy chain. MYH7 was the first gene implicated in a cardiovascular disease, which paved the way for identification of mutations in other heritable disorders, mechanistic studies, and clinical applications, such as predictive testing. The present era of cardiovascular genomics arguably had its inception in the clinical observations of Dr Paré and his colleagues more than 50 years ago.},
}
@article {pmid26432225,
year = {2015},
author = {Green, ED and Watson, JD and Collins, FS},
title = {Human Genome Project: Twenty-five years of big biology.},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {526},
number = {7571},
pages = {29-31},
doi = {10.1038/526029a},
pmid = {26432225},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {Cooperative Behavior ; Datasets as Topic/history ; Genome, Human/genetics ; History, 20th Century ; Human Genome Project/*history/organization & administration ; Humans ; Information Dissemination/history ; Microbiota/genetics ; National Human Genome Research Institute (U.S.)/history ; Neoplasms/genetics ; Research Personnel/history/organization & administration ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26431843,
year = {2015},
author = {Kranz, G},
title = {[Not Available].},
journal = {Wiener klinische Wochenschrift},
volume = {127},
number = {19-20},
pages = {799-800},
doi = {10.1007/s00508-015-0869-5},
pmid = {26431843},
issn = {1613-7671},
mesh = {Austria ; *Awards and Prizes ; Biological Psychiatry/*history ; Endocrinology/*history ; History, 21st Century ; Hormone Replacement Therapy/*history ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Transgender Persons/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26430706,
year = {2015},
author = {Schachter, H},
title = {Robert Spiro Obituary.},
journal = {Glycoconjugate journal},
volume = {32},
number = {6},
pages = {343-344},
pmid = {26430706},
issn = {1573-4986},
mesh = {Glycomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26430164,
year = {2015},
author = {Sussman, HE},
title = {20 Years of Genome Research. Preface.},
journal = {Genome research},
volume = {25},
number = {10},
pages = {xv},
doi = {10.1101/gr.199026.115},
pmid = {26430164},
issn = {1549-5469},
mesh = {Genetic Research/*history ; *Genome ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Publishing/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26426073,
year = {2015},
author = {Hobbs, H and Neill, US},
title = {A conversation with Helen Hobbs.},
journal = {The Journal of clinical investigation},
volume = {125},
number = {10},
pages = {3725-3726},
doi = {10.1172/JCI84086},
pmid = {26426073},
issn = {1558-8238},
mesh = {African Americans/genetics ; California ; Cardiovascular Diseases/ethnology/genetics ; Codon, Nonsense ; Cohort Studies ; Coronary Disease/ethnology/genetics ; European Continental Ancestry Group/genetics ; Founder Effect ; Genetic Predisposition to Disease ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Hispanic Americans/genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II/epidemiology/genetics ; Lipoproteins, LDL/blood/deficiency ; Mutation ; Proprotein Convertase 9 ; Proprotein Convertases/deficiency/*genetics/physiology ; Receptors, LDL/deficiency ; Serine Endopeptidases/deficiency/*genetics/physiology ; Texas/epidemiology ; },
}
@article {pmid26419800,
year = {2015},
author = {Lloyd, A and Sahai, E},
title = {Chris Marshall 1949-2015.},
journal = {Nature cell biology},
volume = {17},
number = {10},
pages = {1229},
doi = {10.1038/ncb3247},
pmid = {26419800},
issn = {1476-4679},
mesh = {Cell Biology/*history ; Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Neoplasms/genetics/*history ; United Kingdom ; ras Proteins/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid26414334,
year = {2016},
author = {Bud, R},
title = {Representing scale: What should be special about the heritage of mass science?.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {55},
number = {},
pages = {117-119},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2015.08.008},
pmid = {26414334},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Genomics/history ; *History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/history ; Science/history ; },
abstract = {This symposium marks the achievement of a transformation in the history of science. Whereas in the 1960s, the study of modern developments was marginal to the field, it has now become a key part of the discipline's central concerns. The contrast between this conference and a 1960 symposium is illuminating. The paper reflects on the tensions over the future direction of the discipline expressed at the 1974 semi-centenary conference of the History of Science Society. Today, genomics with its vast demand for resources and its challenges to traditional boundaries is not untypical of a wide range of scientific activities. Its study can serve as a pioneering case study interesting for itself and important for a wider understanding of science. Papers at this meeting show the implications for the understanding of methods, appropriate targets of study, the interpretation of images and the preservation of archives.},
}
@article {pmid26406362,
year = {2015},
author = {Bellen, HJ and Yamamoto, S},
title = {Morgan's legacy: fruit flies and the functional annotation of conserved genes.},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {163},
number = {1},
pages = {12-14},
doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2015.09.009},
pmid = {26406362},
issn = {1097-4172},
support = {//Howard Hughes Medical Institute/United States ; R01 GM067858/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; Drosophila melanogaster/*genetics ; Genetic Techniques ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Models, Animal ; },
abstract = {In 1915, "The Mechanism of Mendelian Heredity" was published by four prominent Drosophila geneticists. They discovered that genes form linkage groups on chromosomes inherited in a Mendelian fashion and laid the genetic foundation that promoted Drosophila as a model organism. Flies continue to offer great opportunities, including studies in the field of functional genomics.},
}
@article {pmid26406361,
year = {2015},
author = {Birchler, JA},
title = {Mendel, mechanism, models, marketing, and more.},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {163},
number = {1},
pages = {9-11},
doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2015.09.008},
pmid = {26406361},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {Animals ; Chickens/genetics ; Crosses, Genetic ; Genetics/*history ; History, 18th Century ; *Models, Genetic ; Peas/genetics ; Zea mays/genetics ; },
abstract = {This year marks the 150(th) anniversary of the presentation by Gregor Mendel of his studies of plant hybridization to the Brunn Natural History Society. Their nature and meaning have been discussed many times. However, on this occasion, we reflect on the scientific enterprise and the perception of new discoveries.},
}
@article {pmid26394718,
year = {2015},
author = {Carmona, D and Fitzpatrick, CR and Johnson, MT},
title = {Fifty years of co-evolution and beyond: integrating co-evolution from molecules to species.},
journal = {Molecular ecology},
volume = {24},
number = {21},
pages = {5315-5329},
doi = {10.1111/mec.13389},
pmid = {26394718},
issn = {1365-294X},
mesh = {Adaptation, Biological/genetics ; *Biological Evolution ; *Evolution, Molecular ; Genetic Fitness ; Genetics/history ; Genetics, Population ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Models, Biological ; Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {Fifty years after Ehrlich and Raven's seminal paper, the idea of co-evolution continues to grow as a key concept in our understanding of organic evolution. This concept has not only provided a compelling synthesis between evolutionary biology and community ecology, but has also inspired research that extends beyond its original scope. In this article, we identify unresolved questions about the co-evolutionary process and advocate for the integration of co-evolutionary research from molecular to interspecific interactions. We address two basic questions: (i) What is co-evolution and how common is it? (ii) What is the unit of co-evolution? Both questions aim to explore the heart of the co-evolutionary process. Despite the claim that co-evolution is ubiquitous, we argue that there is in fact little evidence to support the view that reciprocal natural selection and coadaptation are common in nature. We also challenge the traditional view that co-evolution only occurs between traits of interacting species. Co-evolution has the potential to explain evolutionary processes and patterns that result from intra- and intermolecular biochemical interactions within cells, intergenomic interactions (e.g. nuclear-cytoplasmic) within species, as well as intergenomic interactions mediated by phenotypic traits between species. Research that bridges across these levels of organization will help to advance our understanding of the importance of the co-evolutionary processes in shaping the diversity of life on Earth.},
}
@article {pmid26392355,
year = {2015},
author = {Portin, P},
title = {The Development of Genetics in the Light of Thomas Kuhn's Theory of Scientific Revolutions.},
journal = {Recent advances in DNA & gene sequences},
volume = {9},
number = {1},
pages = {14-25},
pmid = {26392355},
issn = {2352-0930},
mesh = {Genetics/*history/trends ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Science/*history/trends ; },
abstract = {The concept of a paradigm is in the key position in Thomas Kuhn's theory of scientific revolutions. A paradigm is the framework within which the results, concepts, hypotheses and theories of scientific research work are understood. According to Kuhn, a paradigm guides the working and efforts of scientists during the time period which he calls the period of normal science. Before long, however, normal science leads to unexplained matters, a situation that then leads the development of the scientific discipline in question to a paradigm shift--a scientific revolution. When a new theory is born, it has either gradually emerged as an extension of the past theory, or the old theory has become a borderline case in the new theory. In the former case, one can speak of a paradigm extension. According to the present author, the development of modern genetics has, until very recent years, been guided by a single paradigm, the Mendelian paradigm which Gregor Mendel launched 150 years ago, and under the guidance of this paradigm the development of genetics has proceeded in a normal fashion in the spirit of logical positivism. Modern discoveries in genetics have, however, created a situation which seems to be leading toward a paradigm shift. The most significant of these discoveries are the findings of adaptive mutations, the phenomenon of transgenerational epigenetic inheritance, and, above all, the present deeply critical state of the concept of the gene.},
}
@article {pmid26391791,
year = {2016},
author = {Serpente, N},
title = {More than a Mentor: Leonard Darwin's Contribution to the Assimilation of Mendelism into Eugenics and Darwinism.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {49},
number = {3},
pages = {461-494},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-015-9423-6},
pmid = {26391791},
issn = {1573-0387},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; Biometry/history ; Correspondence as Topic/history ; Eugenics/history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Mentors/history ; Mutation ; *Selection, Genetic ; United Kingdom ; },
abstract = {This article discusses the contribution to evolutionary theory of Leonard Darwin (1850-1943), the eighth child of Charles Darwin. By analysing the correspondence Leonard Darwin maintained with Ronald Aylmer Fisher in conjunction with an assessment of his books and other written works between the 1910s and 1930s, this article argues for a more prominent role played by him than the previously recognised in the literature as an informal mentor of Fisher. The paper discusses Leonard's efforts to amalgamate Mendelism with both Eugenics and Darwinism in order for the first to base their policies on new scientific developments and to help the second in finding a target for natural selection. Without a formal qualification in biological sciences and as such mistrusted by some "formal" scientists, Leonard Darwin engaged with key themes of Darwinism such as mimicry, the role of mutations on speciation and the process of genetic variability, arriving at important conclusions concerning the usefulness of Mendelian genetics for his father's theory.},
}
@article {pmid26390754,
year = {2014},
author = {Poggio, T and Poggio, A},
title = {DONALD ARTHUR GLASER: 21 SEPTEMBER 1926 - 28 FEBRUARY 2013.},
journal = {Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society},
volume = {158},
number = {3},
pages = {311-315},
pmid = {26390754},
issn = {0003-049X},
mesh = {California ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Michigan ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Neurobiology/*history ; Physics/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26389148,
year = {2015},
author = {},
title = {Special issue in honor of John James on the occasion of his 80th birthday.},
journal = {Journal of animal breeding and genetics = Zeitschrift fur Tierzuchtung und Zuchtungsbiologie},
volume = {132},
number = {2},
pages = {85-203},
pmid = {26389148},
issn = {1439-0388},
mesh = {Animal Husbandry ; Animals ; Australia ; Breeding/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Queensland ; },
}
@article {pmid26388555,
year = {2016},
author = {Shaw, J},
title = {Documenting genomics: Applying archival theory to preserving the records of the Human Genome Project.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {55},
number = {},
pages = {61-69},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2015.08.005},
pmid = {26388555},
issn = {1879-2499},
support = {//Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {*Archives/history ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/*history/organization & administration ; Humans ; Records as Topic ; United Kingdom ; United States ; },
abstract = {The Human Genome Archive Project (HGAP) aimed to preserve the documentary heritage of the UK's contribution to the Human Genome Project (HGP) by using archival theory to develop a suitable methodology for capturing the results of modern, collaborative science. After assessing past projects and different archival theories, the HGAP used an approach based on the theory of documentation strategy to try to capture the records of a scientific project that had an influence beyond the purely scientific sphere. The HGAP was an archival survey that ran for two years. It led to ninety scientists being contacted and has, so far, led to six collections being deposited in the Wellcome Library, with additional collections being deposited in other UK repositories. In applying documentation strategy the HGAP was attempting to move away from traditional archival approaches to science, which have generally focused on retired Nobel Prize winners. It has been partially successful in this aim, having managed to secure collections from people who are not 'big names', but who made an important contribution to the HGP. However, the attempt to redress the gender imbalance in scientific collections and to improve record-keeping in scientific organisations has continued to be difficult to achieve.},
}
@article {pmid26386516,
year = {2016},
author = {Serpente, N},
title = {Justifying molecular images in cell biology textbooks: From constructions to primary data.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {55},
number = {},
pages = {105-116},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2015.08.007},
pmid = {26386516},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Animals ; Archives ; *Books, Illustrated/history ; *Cell Biology/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/history ; *Textbooks as Topic/history ; },
abstract = {For scientific claims to be reliable and productive they have to be justified. However, on the one hand little is known on what justification precisely means to scientists, and on the other the position held by philosophers of science on what it entails is rather limited; for justifications customarily refer to the written form (textual expressions) of scientific claims, leaving aside images, which, as many cases from the history of science show are relevant to this process. The fact that images can visually express scientific claims independently from text, plus their vast variety and origins, requires an assessment of the way they are currently justified and in turn used as sources to justify scientific claims in the case of particular scientific fields. Similarly, in view of the different nature of images, analysis is required to determine on what side of the philosophical distinction between data and phenomena these different kinds of images fall. This paper historicizes and documents a particular aspect of contemporary life sciences research: the use of the molecular image as vehicle of knowledge production in cell studies, a field that has undergone a significant shift in visual expressions from the early 1980s onwards. Focussing on textbooks as sources that have been overlooked in the historiography of contemporary biomedicine, the aim is to explore (1) whether the shift of cell studies, entailing a superseding of the optical image traditionally conceptualised as primary data, by the molecular image, corresponds with a shift of justificatory practices, and (2) to assess the role of the molecular image as primary data. This paper also explores the dual role of images as teaching resources and as resources for the construction of knowledge in cell studies especially in its relation to discovery and justification. Finally, this paper seeks to stimulate reflection on what kind of archival resources could benefit the work of present and future epistemic historians in particular those interested on the role of images as sources of training and knowledge production in scientific disciplines.},
}
@article {pmid26383132,
year = {2016},
author = {Aicardi, C},
title = {Francis Crick, cross-worlds influencer: A narrative model to historicize big bioscience.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {55},
number = {},
pages = {83-95},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2015.08.003},
pmid = {26383132},
issn = {1879-2499},
support = {//Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {California ; *Historiography ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; United Kingdom ; },
abstract = {The essay is an empirical case study of famed British scientist Francis Crick. Viewing him as a 'cross-worlds influencer' who was moreover dedicated to a cause, I have tried to understand how these two characteristics influenced the trajectory of his long career and how they shaped his contributions to the diverse research fields in which he was active, and concluded that these characteristics reconfigure Crick's career into a coherent whole. First, I identify a major thread running through Crick's career: helping organise 'un-disciplined' new research fields, and show that his successive choices were not serendipitous but motivated by what he construed as a crusade against 'vitalism': anti-vitalism was a defining driver of his career. I then examine how Crick put his skills as a crossworlds influencer to the service of his cause, by helping organise his chosen fields of intervention. I argue that his activities as a cross-worlds influencer were an integral part of his way of 'doing science' and that his contributions to science, neuroscience in particular, should be re-evaluated in this light. This leads me to advance a possible strategy for historians to investigate big bioscience fields. Following Abir-Am, I propose to trace their genealogies back to the fluctuating semi-institutional gatherings and the institutional structures that sustained them. My research on Crick supports the view that such studies can bring insights into the question of why the contours of contemporary big bioscience endeavours have come to be shaped the way they are. Further, the essay provides a heuristic device for approaching these enquiries: 'follow the cross-worlds influencers' who worked to build and organise these semi-institutional gatherings and institutional structures.},
}
@article {pmid26372894,
year = {2015},
author = {Singh, RS},
title = {Limits of imagination: the 150th Anniversary of Mendel's Laws, and why Mendel failed to see the importance of his discovery for Darwin's theory of evolution.},
journal = {Genome},
volume = {58},
number = {9},
pages = {415-421},
doi = {10.1139/gen-2015-0107},
pmid = {26372894},
issn = {1480-3321},
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; *Biological Evolution ; Genetic Research/*history ; Genetic Variation ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; *Imagination ; *Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {Mendel is credited for discovering Laws of Heredity, but his work has come under criticism on three grounds: for possible falsification of data to fit his expectations, for getting undue credit for the laws of heredity without having ideas of segregation and independent assortment, and for being interested in the development of hybrids rather than in the laws of heredity. I present a brief review of these criticisms and conclude that Mendel deserved to be called the father of genetics even if he may not, and most likely did not, have clear ideas of segregation and particulate determiners as we know them now. I argue that neither Mendel understood the evolutionary significance of his findings for the problem of genetic variation, nor would Darwin have understood their significance had he read Mendel's paper. I argue that the limits to imagination, in both cases, came from their mental framework being shaped by existing paradigms-blending inheritance in the case of Darwin, hybrid development in the case of Mendel. Like Einstein, Darwin's natural selection was deterministic; like Niels Bohr, Mendel's Laws were probabilistic-based on random segregation of trait-determining "factors". Unlike Einstein who understood quantum mechanics, Darwin would have been at a loss with Mendel's paper with no guide to turn to. Geniuses in their imaginations are like heat-seeking missiles locked-in with their targets of deep interests and they generally see things in one dimension only. Imagination has limits; unaided imagination is like a bird without wings--it goes nowhere.},
}
@article {pmid26372579,
year = {2015},
author = {Komaroff, AL},
title = {Modern Biological Research, Medical Practice, and Human Knowledge.},
journal = {JAMA},
volume = {314},
number = {11},
pages = {1133-1135},
doi = {10.1001/jama.2015.10893},
pmid = {26372579},
issn = {1538-3598},
mesh = {Biological Phenomena/*physiology ; Biomedical Research/*trends ; DNA/ultrastructure ; Genome, Human ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; *Knowledge ; Molecular Biology/history/trends ; Physiological Phenomena ; },
}
@article {pmid26372574,
year = {2015},
author = {Disis, ML},
title = {The Lasker Awards--Recognizing and Highlighting Oncology Research.},
journal = {JAMA},
volume = {314},
number = {11},
pages = {1123-1124},
doi = {10.1001/jama.2015.10964},
pmid = {26372574},
issn = {1538-3598},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Biomedical Research/*history/trends ; Forecasting ; Genomics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Medical Oncology/*history/trends ; Neoplasms/diagnosis/*history/therapy ; },
}
@article {pmid26359977,
year = {2015},
author = {Elledge, SJ},
title = {Accidents and Damage Control.},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {162},
number = {6},
pages = {1196-1200},
doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2015.08.042},
pmid = {26359977},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {Biochemistry/*history ; Cloning, Molecular ; *DNA Repair ; DNA Replication ; Eukaryota/genetics/metabolism ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Rec A Recombinases/chemistry/genetics ; Ribonucleotide Reductases/chemistry/*genetics/metabolism ; Sequence Analysis, Protein ; United States ; Yeasts/classification/genetics/*metabolism/radiation effects ; },
}
@article {pmid26359976,
year = {2015},
author = {Witkin, E},
title = {Beginner's Luck.},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {162},
number = {6},
pages = {1192-1195},
doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2015.08.048},
pmid = {26359976},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {Education, Graduate ; Escherichia coli/cytology/*genetics/growth & development/*radiation effects ; Genetics, Microbial/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Microbial Viability/radiation effects ; New York ; },
}
@article {pmid26353441,
year = {2015},
author = {Bod, R},
title = {A Comparative Framework for Studying the Histories of the Humanities and Science.},
journal = {Isis; an international review devoted to the history of science and its cultural influences},
volume = {106},
number = {2},
pages = {367-377},
pmid = {26353441},
issn = {0021-1753},
mesh = {Computers ; History, 20th Century ; Humanities/history ; Informatics/*history ; Linguistics/*history ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Philology/*history ; Science/history ; },
abstract = {While the humanities and the sciences have a closely connected history, there are no general histories that bring the two fields together on an equal footing. This paper argues that there is a level at which some humanistic and scientific disciplines can be brought under a common denominator and compared. This is at the level of underlying methods, especially at the level of formalisms and rule systems used by different disciplines. The essay formally compares linguistics and computer science by noting that the same grammar formalism was used in the 1950s for describing both human and. programming languages. Additionally, it examines the influence of philology on molecular biology, and vice versa, by recognizing that the tree-formalism and rule system used for text reconstruction was also employed in DNA genetics. It also shows that rule systems for source criticism in history are used in forensic science, evidence-based medicine, and jurisprudence. This paper thus opens up a new comparative approach within which the histories of the humanities and the sciences can be examined on a common level.},
}
@article {pmid26348215,
year = {2015},
author = {Jasin, M},
title = {Accolades for the DNA Damage Response.},
journal = {The New England journal of medicine},
volume = {373},
number = {16},
pages = {1492-1495},
doi = {10.1056/NEJMp1509698},
pmid = {26348215},
issn = {1533-4406},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Bacteria/genetics ; Bacteriology/history ; Biomedical Research/history ; DNA Damage/*physiology ; DNA Repair/*physiology ; Eukaryota/genetics ; *Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mutation ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26345423,
year = {2015},
author = {Jackson, S},
title = {Evelyn Witkin and Stephen Elledge share the 2015 Lasker Basic Medical Award.},
journal = {The Journal of clinical investigation},
volume = {125},
number = {10},
pages = {3727-3731},
doi = {10.1172/JCI84318},
pmid = {26345423},
issn = {1558-8238},
mesh = {Ataxia Telangiectasia/genetics ; *Awards and Prizes ; Bacterial Proteins/physiology ; DNA Damage ; DNA Repair/*genetics ; DNA Repair Enzymes/physiology ; Escherichia coli/genetics/radiation effects ; Genetics, Microbial/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Protein Kinases/physiology ; Radiation Tolerance/genetics ; SOS Response (Genetics)/genetics ; Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics/radiation effects ; Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/physiology ; Ultraviolet Rays ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26336949,
year = {2015},
author = {Horch, RE},
title = {In Memoriam: Professor Laurentiu M. Popescu (1944-2015).},
journal = {Journal of cellular and molecular medicine},
volume = {19},
number = {9},
pages = {2047-2048},
doi = {10.1111/jcmm.12686},
pmid = {26336949},
issn = {1582-4934},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Medicine/*history ; Romania ; Telocytes/cytology ; },
}
@article {pmid26336948,
year = {2015},
author = {Wang, X},
title = {In Memoriam: Laurentiu Mircea Popescu (1944-2015).},
journal = {Journal of cellular and molecular medicine},
volume = {19},
number = {9},
pages = {2045-2046},
doi = {10.1111/jcmm.12688},
pmid = {26336948},
issn = {1582-4934},
mesh = {Animals ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Medicine/*history ; Telocytes/metabolism ; },
}
@article {pmid26333393,
year = {2015},
author = {Morange, M},
title = {What history tells us XXXVIII. Resurrection of a transient forgotten model of gene action.},
journal = {Journal of biosciences},
volume = {40},
number = {3},
pages = {473-476},
pmid = {26333393},
issn = {0973-7138},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Models, Biological ; Proteins/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid26317371,
year = {2015},
author = {Ehrlich, M},
title = {Development-linked changes in DNA methylation and hydroxymethylation in humans: interview with Dr Melanie Ehrlich.},
journal = {Epigenomics},
volume = {7},
number = {5},
pages = {691-694},
doi = {10.2217/epi.15.44},
pmid = {26317371},
issn = {1750-192X},
mesh = {5-Methylcytosine/*metabolism ; *DNA Methylation ; Epigenesis, Genetic ; Epigenomics/*history/methods/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Methylation ; Neoplasms/*genetics/metabolism ; Organ Specificity ; },
}
@article {pmid26305971,
year = {2015},
author = {Viegas, J},
title = {Profile of Xinnian Dong.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {112},
number = {36},
pages = {11144-11145},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1514692112},
pmid = {26305971},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Arabidopsis/genetics/immunology/microbiology ; Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics/immunology ; China ; Disease Resistance/*genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Host-Pathogen Interactions/immunology ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Plant Diseases/*genetics/microbiology ; Plant Immunity/genetics ; Plant Pathology/*history ; Pseudomonas syringae/immunology/physiology ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26281767,
year = {2015},
author = {Chadov, BF and Fedorova, NB and Chadova, EV},
title = {Conditional mutations in Drosophila melanogaster: On the occasion of the 150th anniversary of G. Mendel's report in Brünn.},
journal = {Mutation research. Reviews in mutation research},
volume = {765},
number = {},
pages = {40-55},
doi = {10.1016/j.mrrev.2015.06.001},
pmid = {26281767},
issn = {1388-2139},
mesh = {Animals ; Breeding/history/methods ; Chromosomes, Insect ; Drosophila Proteins/*genetics ; Drosophila melanogaster/classification/*genetics ; Epigenesis, Genetic ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; Mutation ; Species Specificity ; },
abstract = {The basis for modern genetics was laid by Gregor Mendel. He proposed that traits belonging to the intraspecific variability class be studied. However, individuals of one species possess traits of another class. They are related to intraspecific similarity. Individuals never differ from each other in these traits. By analogy with traits varying within a species and determined by genes, it is conjectured that intraspecific similarity is determined by genes, too. If so, mutations in these genes can be obtained. This paper provides a review of works published in 2000-2014 that: (1) propose breeding methods for detection of mutations in Drosophila melanogaster genes that lead intraspecific similarity; these mutations were called conditional; (2) describe collections of conditional mutations in chromosomes X, 2, and 3 of Drosophila; (3) show unusual features of epigenetic nature in the mutants; and (4) analyze these features of the mutants. Based on the peculiarities of manifestation it is supposed that the recognized conditional mutations occur in genes responsible for intraspecific similarity. The genes presumably belong to the so-called regulatory network of the Drosophila genome. This approach expands the scope of breeding analysis introduced by G. Mendel for heredity studies 150 years ago.},
}
@article {pmid26281764,
year = {2015},
author = {Dronamraju, K},
title = {J.B.S. Haldane as I knew him, with a brief account of his contribution to mutation research.},
journal = {Mutation research. Reviews in mutation research},
volume = {765},
number = {},
pages = {1-6},
doi = {10.1016/j.mrrev.2015.05.002},
pmid = {26281764},
issn = {1388-2139},
support = {//Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {England ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; India ; *Mutation ; },
abstract = {J.B.S. Haldane made important contributions to several sciences although he did not possess an academic qualification in any branch of science. A classical scholar, who grew up in a scientific household in Oxford, Haldane was taught the principles of scientific experimentation from his childhood by his father, the distinguished physiologist John Scott Haldane. Collaborating with his father, Haldane contributed to respiratory physiology but soon switched to genetics, especially population genetics. He investigated mathematically the dynamics of selection - mutation balance in populations - concluding that it is mutation that determines the course of evolution. Besides genetics, Haldane was noted for his important contributions to enzyme kinetics, origin of life, biometry, cybernetics, cosmology and deep sea diving, among others.},
}
@article {pmid26280579,
year = {2015},
author = {Ginsburg, D},
title = {Introduction of Francis S. Collins.},
journal = {The Journal of clinical investigation},
volume = {125},
number = {9},
pages = {3321-3327},
doi = {10.1172/JCI83698},
pmid = {26280579},
issn = {1558-8238},
mesh = {Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Portraits as Topic ; },
}
@article {pmid26272995,
year = {2015},
author = {Ferris, H and Hieb, WF},
title = {Ellsworth C. Dougherty: A Pioneer in the Selection of Caenorhabditis elegans as a Model Organism.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {200},
number = {4},
pages = {991-1002},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.178913},
pmid = {26272995},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; Caenorhabditis elegans/*genetics ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; *Models, Animal ; United States ; },
abstract = {Ellsworth Dougherty (1921-1965) was a man of impressive intellectual dimensions and interests; in a relatively short career he contributed enormously as researcher and scholar to the biological knowledge base for selection of Caenorhabditis elegans as a model organism in neurobiology, genetics, and molecular biology. He helped guide the choice of strains that were eventually used, and, in particular, he developed the methodology and understanding for the nutrition and axenic culture of nematodes and other organisms. Dougherty insisted upon a concise terminology for culture techniques and coined descriptive neologisms that were justified by their linguistic roots. Among other contributions, he refined the classification system for the Protista.},
}
@article {pmid26271158,
year = {2015},
author = {Fellman, J and Parisi, P},
title = {Aldur W. Eriksson 7.1.1927-3.4.2015.},
journal = {Twin research and human genetics : the official journal of the International Society for Twin Studies},
volume = {18},
number = {5},
pages = {619-620},
doi = {10.1017/thg.2015.50},
pmid = {26271158},
issn = {1832-4274},
mesh = {Finland ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Twins/genetics/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26259256,
year = {2015},
author = {Munch-Petersen, B and Gojkovic, Z and Knecht, W},
title = {Jure Piskur (1960 - 2014).},
journal = {Journal of genetics and genomics = Yi chuan xue bao},
volume = {42},
number = {5},
pages = {275-277},
pmid = {26259256},
issn = {1673-8527},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Slovenia ; },
}
@article {pmid26258186,
year = {2015},
author = {Delepelaire, P and Izadi-Pruneyre, N and Delepierre, M and Ghigo, JM and Schwartz, M},
title = {A tribute to Cécile Wandersman.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {166},
number = {5},
pages = {393-398},
pmid = {26258186},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Bacteriology/*history ; Bacteriophages/chemistry/genetics ; France ; Genetics, Microbial/*history ; Gram-Negative Bacteria/metabolism ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Type I Secretion Systems ; },
}
@article {pmid26256508,
year = {2015},
author = {Björkman, M},
title = {The Emergence of Genetic Counseling in Sweden: Examples from Eugenics and Medical Genetics.},
journal = {Science in context},
volume = {28},
number = {3},
pages = {489-513},
doi = {10.1017/S0269889715000216},
pmid = {26256508},
issn = {0269-8897},
mesh = {Eugenics/*history ; Genetic Counseling/*history ; Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Sterilization, Reproductive ; Sweden ; },
abstract = {This paper examines the intertwined relations between eugenics and medical genetics from a Swedish perspective in the 1940s and 1950s. The Swedish case shows that a rudimentary form of genetic counseling emerged within eugenic practices in the applications of the Swedish Sterilization Act of 1941, here analyzed from the phenomenon of "heredophobia" (ärftlighetsskräck). At the same time genetic counseling also existed outside eugenic practices, within the discipline of medical genetics. The paper argues that a demand for genetic counseling increased in the 1940s and 1950s in response to a sense of reproductive responsibility engendered by earlier eugenic discourse. The paper also questions the claim made by theoreticians of biopolitics that biological citizens have emerged only during the last decades, especially in neoliberal societies. From the Swedish case it is possible to argue that this had already happened earlier in relation to the proliferation of various aspects of eugenics to the public.},
}
@article {pmid26256506,
year = {2015},
author = {von Schwerin, A},
title = {Shaping Vulnerable Bodies at the Thin Boundary between Environment and Organism: Skin, DNA Repair, and a Genealogy of DNA Care Strategies.},
journal = {Science in context},
volume = {28},
number = {3},
pages = {427-464},
doi = {10.1017/S0269889715000162},
pmid = {26256506},
issn = {0269-8897},
mesh = {*DNA Repair ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Radiologic Health/*history ; Risk Assessment/history ; Xeroderma Pigmentosum/etiology/*history ; },
abstract = {This paper brings together the history of risk and the history of DNA repair, a biological phenomenon that emerged as a research field in between molecular biology, genetics, and radiation research in the 1960s. The case of xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), an inherited hypersensitivity to UV light and, hence, a disposition to skin cancer will be the starting point to argue that, in the 1970s and 1980s, DNA repair became entangled in the creation of new models of the human body at risk - what is here conceptually referred to as the vulnerability aspect of body history - and new attempts at cancer prevention and enhancement of the body associated with the new flourishing research areas of antimutagenesis and anticarcinogenesis. The aim will be to demonstrate that DNA repair created special attempts at disease prevention: molecular enhancement, seeking to identify means to increase the self-repair abilities of the body at the molecular level. Prevention in this sense meant enhancing the body's ability to cope with the environmental hazards of an already toxic world. This strategy has recently been adopted by the beauty industry, which introduced DNA care as a new target for skin care research and anti-aging formulas.},
}
@article {pmid26256502,
year = {2015},
author = {Grote, M and Stadler, M},
title = {Introduction: Surface Histories.},
journal = {Science in context},
volume = {28},
number = {3},
pages = {311-315},
doi = {10.1017/S0269889715000149},
pmid = {26256502},
issn = {0269-8897},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Physics/*history ; Physiology/*history ; Research/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26238262,
year = {2015},
author = {Eppig, JT and Richardson, JE and Kadin, JA and Ringwald, M and Blake, JA and Bult, CJ},
title = {Mouse Genome Informatics (MGI): reflecting on 25 years.},
journal = {Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society},
volume = {26},
number = {7-8},
pages = {272-284},
doi = {10.1007/s00335-015-9589-4},
pmid = {26238262},
issn = {1432-1777},
support = {HG004834/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; CA089713/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; HG000330/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; R01 GM080646/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; P41 HG000330/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; R01 CA089713/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; P30 CA034196/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; R24 OD011190/OD/NIH HHS/United States ; R01 HG004834/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; GM080646/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; HD062499/HD/NICHD NIH HHS/United States ; OD011190/OD/NIH HHS/United States ; P41 HD062499/HD/NICHD NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; Databases, Genetic/*history/supply & distribution ; Disease Models, Animal ; *Genome ; Genomics/*history/methods/trends ; Genotype ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mice ; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ; Phenotype ; Reverse Genetics ; *Software ; },
abstract = {From its inception in 1989, the mission of the Mouse Genome Informatics (MGI) resource remains to integrate genetic, genomic, and biological data about the laboratory mouse to facilitate the study of human health and disease. This mission is ever more feasible as the revolution in genetics knowledge, the ability to sequence genomes, and the ability to specifically manipulate mammalian genomes are now at our fingertips. Through major paradigm shifts in biological research and computer technologies, MGI has adapted and evolved to become an integral part of the larger global bioinformatics infrastructure and honed its ability to provide authoritative reference datasets used and incorporated by many other established bioinformatics resources. Here, we review some of the major changes in research approaches over that last quarter century, how these changes are reflected in the MGI resource you use today, and what may be around the next corner.},
}
@article {pmid26230006,
year = {2015},
author = {Karlsson, AH and Lindahl, G and Warner, RD and Hunt, MC},
title = {Professor Kerstin Lundström, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, 1946–2015.},
journal = {Meat science},
volume = {107},
number = {},
pages = {109},
pmid = {26230006},
issn = {1873-4138},
mesh = {Food Technology/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Sweden ; },
}
@article {pmid26227877,
year = {2015},
author = {McNally, E and Patterson, K},
title = {Elizabeth McNally: A Muscular Approach.},
journal = {Circulation research},
volume = {117},
number = {4},
pages = {317-320},
doi = {10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.115.307128},
pmid = {26227877},
issn = {1524-4571},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biomedical Research/history ; Cardiomyopathies/*genetics/history ; Career Choice ; Genetic Markers ; Genetic Predisposition to Disease ; Genetic Variation ; *Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mentors ; Muscular Dystrophies/*genetics/history ; Women, Working ; },
}
@article {pmid26223881,
year = {2015},
author = {Dolan, ME and Baldarelli, RM and Bello, SM and Ni, L and McAndrews, MS and Bult, CJ and Kadin, JA and Richardson, JE and Ringwald, M and Eppig, JT and Blake, JA},
title = {Orthology for comparative genomics in the mouse genome database.},
journal = {Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society},
volume = {26},
number = {7-8},
pages = {305-313},
doi = {10.1007/s00335-015-9588-5},
pmid = {26223881},
issn = {1432-1777},
support = {HG000330/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; U41 HG002273/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; P41 HG000330/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; P30 CA034196/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; HG002273/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; R01 HG002273/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; HD062499/HD/NICHD NIH HHS/United States ; P41 HD062499/HD/NICHD NIH HHS/United States ; P41 HG002273/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Alleles ; Animals ; Databases, Genetic/*history ; Disease Models, Animal ; *Genome ; Genomics/history/*methods ; Genotype ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mice ; Molecular Sequence Annotation ; Phenotype ; Phylogeny ; *Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ; },
abstract = {The mouse genome database (MGD) is the model organism database component of the mouse genome informatics system at The Jackson Laboratory. MGD is the international data resource for the laboratory mouse and facilitates the use of mice in the study of human health and disease. Since its beginnings, MGD has included comparative genomics data with a particular focus on human-mouse orthology, an essential component of the use of mouse as a model organism. Over the past 25 years, novel algorithms and addition of orthologs from other model organisms have enriched comparative genomics in MGD data, extending the use of orthology data to support the laboratory mouse as a model of human biology. Here, we describe current comparative data in MGD and review the history and refinement of orthology representation in this resource.},
}
@article {pmid26216951,
year = {2015},
author = {Patel, DJ and Davis, TH},
title = {Profile of Dinshaw J. Patel.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {112},
number = {34},
pages = {10570-10572},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1512793112},
pmid = {26216951},
issn = {1091-6490},
support = {P30 CA008748/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Chemistry/history ; Epigenomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; India ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Nucleic Acid Conformation ; RNA/chemistry/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26211095,
year = {2015},
author = {Nau, JY},
title = {[Bertrand Jordan, molecular biologist and the Gospel of John].},
journal = {Revue medicale suisse},
volume = {11},
number = {478},
pages = {1318-1319},
pmid = {26211095},
issn = {1660-9379},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Male ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Precision Medicine ; Switzerland ; *Textbooks as Topic ; },
}
@article {pmid26209888,
year = {2015},
author = {Fisher, S},
title = {Not just "a clever way to detect whether DNA really made RNA": The invention of DNA-RNA hybridization and its outcome.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {53},
number = {},
pages = {40-52},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2015.07.002},
pmid = {26209888},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; Illinois ; Molecular Biology/*history/methods ; Nucleic Acid Hybridization/*methods ; },
abstract = {The invention of DNA-RNA hybridization in 1960 by Ben Hall and Sol Spiegelman had a powerful impact on the theory and discourse of molecular biology. Yet, despite its importance, the story of this invention has barely been told. Hybridization allowed biologists to bridge the theoretical realm and the material world of organisms, to correlate a hypothetical concept of biological information transfer with a mechanism capable of making an RNA copy of DNA. During the early 1960s, Spiegelman and coworkers employed hybridization to investigate the origin of RNAs found in cells. They operationally defined messenger RNA and elucidated several aspects of genome organization. For Spiegelman, this was the culmination of his longstanding interest in the mechanism of enzyme/protein synthesis; for Hall, it was the beginning of a successful career in genetics. Other scientists immediately recognized the power of the technique and introduced improvements. In 1965, Gillespie and Spiegelman combined several modifications and described a procedure for hybridization that became standard. Since the 1970s, it has become an essential tool in biology and in biotechnology, and a core component in molecular techniques such as DNA microarrays. Notwithstanding its current success, the inventors' names have disappeared from the literature. This curiosity is discussed.},
}
@article {pmid26205203,
year = {2015},
author = {Zwart, H},
title = {The Third Man: comparative analysis of a science autobiography and a cinema classic as windows into post-war life sciences research.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {37},
number = {4},
pages = {382-412},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-015-0080-z},
pmid = {26205203},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {*Autobiography as Topic ; DNA/analysis/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; *Motion Pictures ; Philosophy ; United Kingdom ; Warfare ; },
abstract = {In 2003, biophysicist and Nobel Laureate Maurice Wilkins published his autobiography entitled The Third Man. In the preface, he diffidently points out that the title (which presents him as the 'third' man credited with the co-discovery of the structure of DNA, besides Watson and Crick) was chosen by his publisher, as a reference to the famous 1949 movie no doubt, featuring Orson Welles in his classical role as penicillin racketeer Harry Lime. In this paper I intend to show that there is much more to this title than merely its familiar ring. If subjected to a (psychoanalytically inspired) comparative analysis, multiple correspondences between movie and memoirs can be brought to the fore. Taken together, these documents shed an intriguing light on the vicissitudes of budding life sciences research during the post-war era. I will focus my comparative analysis on issues still relevant today, such as dual use, the handling of sensitive scientific information (in a moral setting defined by the tension between collaboration and competition) and, finally, on the interwovenness of science and warfare (i.e. the 'militarisation' of research and the relationship between beauty and destruction). Thus, I will explain how science autobiographies on the one hand and genres of the imagination (such as novels and movies) on the other may deepen our comprehension of tensions and dilemmas of life sciences research then and now. For that reason, science autobiographies can provide valuable input (case material) for teaching philosophy and history of science to science students.},
}
@article {pmid26191563,
year = {2014},
author = {},
title = {Special issue dedicated to John Loehlin.},
journal = {Behavior genetics},
volume = {44},
number = {6},
pages = {547-695},
pmid = {26191563},
issn = {1573-3297},
mesh = {Genetics, Behavioral/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid26190636,
year = {2015},
author = {Brunori, M},
title = {Half a Century of Hemoglobin's Allostery.},
journal = {Biophysical journal},
volume = {109},
number = {6},
pages = {1077-1079},
doi = {10.1016/j.bpj.2015.06.025},
pmid = {26190636},
issn = {1542-0086},
mesh = {Allosteric Regulation ; Carbon Monoxide/metabolism ; Hemoglobins/*chemistry/*metabolism ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Models, Molecular ; Molecular Biology/history ; Oxygen/metabolism ; Protein Structure, Tertiary ; },
}
@article {pmid26183796,
year = {2015},
author = {Wood, RJ},
title = {Darbishire expands his vision of heredity from Mendelian genetics to inherited memory.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {53},
number = {},
pages = {16-39},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2015.06.001},
pmid = {26183796},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {England ; Female ; Genetics/*history ; *Heredity ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; *Memory ; },
abstract = {The British biologist A.D. Darbishire (1879-1915) responded to the rediscovery in 1900 of Mendel's theory of heredity by testing it experimentally, first in Oxford, then in Manchester and London. He summarised his conclusions in a textbook 'Breeding and the Mendelian Discovery' (1911), in which he questioned whether Mendelism alone could explain all aspects of practical breeding experience. Already he had begun to think about an alternative theory to give greater emphasis to the widely held conviction among breeders regarding the inheritance of characteristics acquired during an individual's life. Redefining heredity in terms of a germ-plasm based biological memory, he used vocabulary drawn partly from sources outside conventional science, including the metaphysical/vitalistic writings of Samuel Butler and Henri Bergson. An evolving hereditary memory fitted well with the conception of breeding as a creative art aimed at greater economic efficiency. For evolution beyond human control he proposed a self-modifying process, claiming it to surpass in efficiency the chancy mechanism of natural selection proposed by Darwin. From his writings, including early chapters of an unfinished book entitled 'An Introduction to a Biology', we consider how he reached these concepts and how they relate to later advances in understanding the genome and the genetic programme.},
}
@article {pmid26181810,
year = {2015},
author = {Ptashne, M and Gitschier, J},
title = {Irrepressible: An Interview with Mark Ptashne.},
journal = {PLoS genetics},
volume = {11},
number = {7},
pages = {e1005351},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pgen.1005351},
pmid = {26181810},
issn = {1553-7404},
mesh = {History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26180852,
year = {2015},
author = {Sanmann, JN and McGavran, L and Patil, SR},
title = {In Memoriam: Warren G. Sanger, PhD (October 6, 1945-February 5, 2015).},
journal = {Cancer genetics},
volume = {208},
number = {4},
pages = {105-106},
pmid = {26180852},
issn = {2210-7762},
mesh = {Cytogenetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26177732,
year = {2015},
author = {Opitz, JM},
title = {An inner god: BEN E. KATZ (1921-2015) as geneticist.},
journal = {American journal of medical genetics. Part A},
volume = {167A},
number = {11},
pages = {2516-2519},
doi = {10.1002/ajmg.a.37216},
pmid = {26177732},
issn = {1552-4833},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26172373,
year = {2015},
author = {Perlman, S},
title = {Research Driven by Curiosity: The Journey from Basic Molecular Biology and Virology to Studies of Human Pathogenic Coronaviruses.},
journal = {PLoS pathogens},
volume = {11},
number = {7},
pages = {e1005023},
doi = {10.1371/journal.ppat.1005023},
pmid = {26172373},
issn = {1553-7374},
support = {P01 AI060699/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; *Biomedical Research/history ; *Coronaviridae ; *Coronaviridae Infections ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Molecular Biology/history ; },
}
@article {pmid26170444,
year = {2015},
author = {Peluffo, AE},
title = {The "Genetic Program": Behind the Genesis of an Influential Metaphor.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {200},
number = {3},
pages = {685-696},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.178418},
pmid = {26170444},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; Genome ; History, 20th Century ; *Metaphor ; Phenotype ; *Terminology as Topic ; },
abstract = {The metaphor of the "genetic program," indicating the genome as a set of instructions required to build a phenotype, has been very influential in biology despite various criticisms over the years. This metaphor, first published in 1961, is thought to have been invented independently in two different articles, one by Ernst Mayr and the other by François Jacob and Jacques Monod. Here, after a detailed analysis of what both parties meant by "genetic program," I show, using unpublished archives, the strong resemblance between the ideas of Mayr and Monod and suggest that their idea of genetic program probably shares a common origin. I explore the possibility that the two men met before 1961 and also exchanged their ideas through common friends and colleagues in the field of molecular biology. Based on unpublished correspondence of Jacob and Monod, I highlight the important events that influenced the preparation of their influential paper, which introduced the concept of the genetic program. Finally, I suggest that the genetic program metaphor may have preceded both papers and that it was probably used informally before 1961.},
}
@article {pmid26170442,
year = {2015},
author = {Biggins, S},
title = {Under Tension: Kinetochores and Basic Research.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {200},
number = {3},
pages = {681-682},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.178467},
pmid = {26170442},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Kinetochores ; Societies, Scientific ; Spindle Apparatus ; United States ; },
abstract = {The Genetics Society of America's Edward Novitski Prize recognizes an extraordinary level of creativity and intellectual ingenuity in the solution of significant problems in genetics research. The 2015 winner, Sue Biggins, has made significant contributions to our understanding of how chromosomes attach to the mitotic spindle, a process essential for cell division and frequently impaired in cancer. Among other achievements, Biggins was the first to demonstrate that the Aurora B protein kinase is a key regulator of kinetochore function and that chromatin composition and centromere identity can be regulated by histone proteolysis. In 2010, Biggins and her colleagues were the first to purify kinetochores and, using this system, have already made several groundbreaking discoveries about the function and structure of these crucial components of the segregation machinery.},
}
@article {pmid26170441,
year = {2015},
author = {Stark, LA},
title = {Science Translator: An Interview with Louisa Stark.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {200},
number = {3},
pages = {679-680},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.178459},
pmid = {26170441},
issn = {1943-2631},
support = {//Howard Hughes Medical Institute/United States ; },
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Education, Professional ; Genetics/education/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Societies, Scientific ; United States ; },
abstract = {The Genetics Society of America's Elizabeth W. Jones Award for Excellence in Education recognizes significant and sustained impact on genetics education. The 2015 awardee, Louisa Stark, has made a major impact on global access to genetics education through her work as director of the University of Utah Genetic Science Learning Center. The Center's Learn.Genetics and Teach.Genetics websites are the most widely used online genetic education resources in the world. In 2014, they were visited by 18 million students, educators, scientists, and members of the public. With over 60 million page views annually, Learn.Genetics is among the most used sites on the Web.},
}
@article {pmid26170440,
year = {2015},
author = {Postlethwait, JH},
title = {"Wrecks of Ancient Life": Genetic Variants Vetted by Natural Selection.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {200},
number = {3},
pages = {675-678},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.178442},
pmid = {26170440},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Physical Chromosome Mapping/history ; Selection, Genetic ; Sequence Analysis, DNA/history ; Societies, Scientific ; United States ; Zebrafish/genetics ; },
abstract = {The Genetics Society of America's George W. Beadle Award honors individuals who have made outstanding contributions to the community of genetics researchers and who exemplify the qualities of its namesake as a respected academic, administrator, and public servant. The 2015 recipient is John Postlethwait. He has made groundbreaking contributions in developing the zebrafish as a molecular genetic model and in understanding the evolution of new gene functions in vertebrates. He built the first zebrafish genetic map and showed that its genome, along with that of distantly related teleost fish, had been duplicated. Postlethwait played an integral role in the zebrafish genome-sequencing project and elucidated the genomic organization of several fish species. Postlethwait is also honored for his active involvement with the zebrafish community, advocacy for zebrafish as a model system, and commitment to driving the field forward.},
}
@article {pmid26170439,
year = {2015},
author = {Henikoff, S},
title = {The Genetic Map Enters Its Second Century.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {200},
number = {3},
pages = {671-674},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.178434},
pmid = {26170439},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Centromere ; Epigenesis, Genetic ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Societies, Scientific ; United States ; },
abstract = {The Genetics Society of America (GSA) Medal is awarded to an individual for outstanding contributions to the field of genetics in the past 15 years. Recipients of the GSA Medal are recognized for elegant and highly meaningful contributions to modern genetics and exemplify the ingenuity of GSA members. The 2015 recipient is Steven Henikoff, whose achievements include major contributions to Drosophila genetics and epigenetics, Arabidopsis genetics and epigenetics, population and evolutionary genetics, genomic technologies, computational biology, and transcription and chromatin biology. Among these achievements, Henikoff elucidated the mechanism for position-effect variegation, revealed a central role for variant histones in nucleosome assembly at active genes, and provided new insights into genome evolution. He has also developed widely used computational tools for genome and protein analysis and new strategies for mapping chromatin-binding sites.},
}
@article {pmid26170438,
year = {2015},
author = {Charlesworth, B},
title = {What Use Is Population Genetics?.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {200},
number = {3},
pages = {667-669},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.115.178426},
pmid = {26170438},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Societies, Scientific ; United States ; },
abstract = {The Genetic Society of America's Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal is awarded to an individual GSA member for lifetime achievement in the field of genetics. For over 40 years, 2015 recipient Brian Charlesworth has been a leader in both theoretical and empirical evolutionary genetics, making substantial contributions to our understanding of how evolution acts on genetic variation. Some of the areas in which Charlesworth's research has been most influential are the evolution of sex chromosomes, transposable elements, deleterious mutations, sexual reproduction, and life history. He also developed the influential theory of background selection, whereby the recurrent elimination of deleterious mutations reduces variation at linked sites, providing a general explanation for the correlation between recombination rate and genetic variation.},
}
@article {pmid26152175,
year = {2015},
author = {Guénet, JL and Panthier, JJ and Avner, P and Heard, E and Montagutelli, X},
title = {[The legacy of Mary F. Lyon (1925-2014)].},
journal = {Medecine sciences : M/S},
volume = {31},
number = {6-7},
pages = {687-689},
doi = {10.1051/medsci/20153106024},
pmid = {26152175},
issn = {0767-0974},
mesh = {Animals ; England ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mice ; X Chromosome/genetics ; X Chromosome Inactivation ; },
}
@article {pmid26148136,
year = {2015},
author = {Kazazian, HH and Paalman, MH and Cutting, GR},
title = {In Memoriam: Richard G.H. Cotton (1940-2015).},
journal = {Human mutation},
volume = {36},
number = {8},
pages = {741-742},
doi = {10.1002/humu.22826},
pmid = {26148136},
issn = {1098-1004},
mesh = {Australia ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; Genome, Human ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mutation ; Periodicals as Topic ; },
}
@article {pmid26140447,
year = {2015},
author = {Botkin, JR and Belmont, JW and Berg, JS and Berkman, BE and Bombard, Y and Holm, IA and Levy, HP and Ormond, KE and Saal, HM and Spinner, NB and Wilfond, BS and McInerney, JD},
title = {Points to Consider: Ethical, Legal, and Psychosocial Implications of Genetic Testing in Children and Adolescents.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {97},
number = {1},
pages = {6-21},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.05.022},
pmid = {26140447},
issn = {1537-6605},
support = {P20 HG007249/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; UL1 TR001067/TR/NCATS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Adolescent ; Child ; Genetic Carrier Screening ; Genetic Testing/*ethics/*legislation & jurisprudence/*trends ; Genetics/*history ; Genomics/ethics/*methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Infant, Newborn ; Informed Consent By Minors/*psychology ; Microarray Analysis/methods/trends ; Pharmacogenetics/methods ; },
abstract = {In 1995, the American Society of Human Genetics (ASHG) and American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) jointly published a statement on genetic testing in children and adolescents. In the past 20 years, much has changed in the field of genetics, including the development of powerful new technologies, new data from genetic research on children and adolescents, and substantial clinical experience. This statement represents current opinion by the ASHG on the ethical, legal, and social issues concerning genetic testing in children. These recommendations are relevant to families, clinicians, and investigators. After a brief review of the 1995 statement and major changes in genetic technologies in recent years, this statement offers points to consider on a broad range of test technologies and their applications in clinical medicine and research. Recommendations are also made for record and communication issues in this domain and for professional education.},
}
@article {pmid26138341,
year = {2015},
author = {Nicholas, FW and Mäki-Tanila, A},
title = {An important anniversary: 150 years since Mendel's laws of inheritance made their first public appearance.},
journal = {Journal of animal breeding and genetics = Zeitschrift fur Tierzuchtung und Zuchtungsbiologie},
volume = {132},
number = {4},
pages = {277-280},
doi = {10.1111/jbg.12175},
pmid = {26138341},
issn = {1439-0388},
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid26135438,
year = {2015},
author = {Kutschera, U},
title = {August Weismann: A prescient view of women in evolution.},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {523},
number = {7558},
pages = {35},
doi = {10.1038/523035d},
pmid = {26135438},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; Female ; Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 19th Century ; Humans ; Male ; },
}
@article {pmid26130551,
year = {2015},
author = {Ørstavik, KH},
title = {[Mary Lyon and the hypothesis on X-chromosome inactivation].},
journal = {Tidsskrift for den Norske laegeforening : tidsskrift for praktisk medicin, ny raekke},
volume = {135},
number = {12-13},
pages = {1150-1151},
doi = {10.4045/tidsskr.15.0512},
pmid = {26130551},
issn = {0807-7096},
mesh = {England ; Female ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Women ; *X Chromosome Inactivation ; },
}
@article {pmid26126273,
year = {2015},
author = {Cobb, M},
title = {Who discovered messenger RNA?.},
journal = {Current biology : CB},
volume = {25},
number = {13},
pages = {R526-32},
doi = {10.1016/j.cub.2015.05.032},
pmid = {26126273},
issn = {1879-0445},
mesh = {*Cooperative Behavior ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Models, Genetic ; RNA, Messenger/*genetics/history ; },
abstract = {The announcement of the discovery of messenger RNA (mRNA) and the cracking of the genetic code took place within weeks of each other in a climax of scientific excitement during the summer of 1961. Although mRNA is of decisive importance to our understanding of gene function, no Nobel Prize was awarded for its discovery. The large number of people involved, the complex nature of the results, and the tortuous path that was taken over half a century ago, all show that simple claims of priority may not reflect how science works.},
}
@article {pmid26122062,
year = {2015},
author = {Watts, G},
title = {Ciaran Bernard John Woodman.},
journal = {Lancet (London, England)},
volume = {385},
number = {9986},
pages = {2458},
doi = {10.1016/S0140-6736(15)61130-8},
pmid = {26122062},
issn = {1474-547X},
mesh = {Cancer Vaccines/history ; Epigenomics/history ; Female ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Papillomavirus Vaccines/*history ; United Kingdom ; Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/genetics/history/prevention & control ; },
}
@article {pmid26117915,
year = {2015},
author = {Kobylianskiĭ, VI},
title = {[ANALYSIS OF F.M.DOSTOEVSKIĬ'S HEALTH, PERSONALITY, AND WORKS FROM THE GENETIC STANDPOINT. PART 1].},
journal = {Klinicheskaia meditsina},
volume = {93},
number = {2},
pages = {24-33},
pmid = {26117915},
issn = {0023-2149},
mesh = {Epilepsy/genetics/*history ; *Famous Persons ; Genetic Predisposition to Disease/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; Humans ; *Medicine in Literature ; *Personality ; Russia (Pre-1917) ; },
abstract = {The data on Dostoevsky's epilepsy are ambiguous and often contradictory. It prompted consideration of certain genetic aspects of the writer's pedigree for the clarification of this issue. The phenomenon of Dostoevsky's genius was for the first time contemplated from the standpoint of the contribution of genetic factors to his creative work. It was shown that Dostoevsky's ancestry can not be a source of hereditary predisposition to epilepsy. The available data question the genuine nature of his disease. Characteristic of Dostoevsky's ancestry is the wide occurrence of "creativeness" genes. Their cumulation together with a number of other factors verified in the writer can account for the phenomenon of his genius.},
}
@article {pmid26111842,
year = {2015},
author = {Germann, P},
title = {[Constant or break? On the relations between human genetics and eugenics in the Twentieth Century].},
journal = {Therapeutische Umschau. Revue therapeutique},
volume = {72},
number = {7},
pages = {457-462},
doi = {10.1024/0040-5930/a000700},
pmid = {26111842},
issn = {0040-5930},
mesh = {Eugenics/*history ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; Germany ; Goiter/*genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; National Socialism/*history ; Switzerland ; },
abstract = {The history of human genetics has been a neglected topic in history of science and medicine for a long time. Only recently, have medical historians begun to pay more attention to the history of human heredity. An important research question deals with the interconnections between human genetics and eugenics. This paper addresses this question: By focusing on a Swiss case study, the investigation of the heredity of goiter, I will argue that there existed close but also ambiguous relations between heredity research and eugenics in the twentieth century. Studies on human heredity often produced evidence that challenged eugenic aims and ideas. Concurrently, however, these studies fostered visions of genetic improvement of human populations.},
}
@article {pmid26104369,
year = {2014},
author = {Kado, CI},
title = {Historical Events That Spawned the Field of Plasmid Biology.},
journal = {Microbiology spectrum},
volume = {2},
number = {5},
pages = {},
doi = {10.1128/microbiolspec.PLAS-0019-2013},
pmid = {26104369},
issn = {2165-0497},
mesh = {Adaptation, Biological ; Biology/*history ; Evolution, Molecular ; *Extrachromosomal Inheritance ; Gene Transfer, Horizontal ; Genetics, Microbial/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; *Plasmids ; Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {This chapter revisits the historical development and outcome of studies focused on the transmissible, extrachromosomal genetic elements called plasmids. Early work on plasmids involved structural and genetic mapping of these molecules, followed by the development of an understanding of how plasmids replicate and segregate during cell division. The intriguing property of plasmid transmission between bacteria and between bacteria and higher cells has received considerable attention. The utilitarian aspects of plasmids are described, including examples of various plasmid vector systems. This chapter also discusses the functional attributes of plasmids needed for their persistence and survival in nature and in man-made environments. The term plasmid biology was first conceived at the Fallen Leaf Lake Conference on Promiscuous Plasmids, 1990, Lake Tahoe, California. The International Society for Plasmid Biology was established in 2004 (www.ISPB.org).},
}
@article {pmid26096544,
year = {2016},
author = {Puchta, H},
title = {Breaking DNA in plants: how I almost missed my personal breakthrough.},
journal = {Plant biotechnology journal},
volume = {14},
number = {2},
pages = {437-440},
doi = {10.1111/pbi.12420},
pmid = {26096544},
issn = {1467-7652},
mesh = {Biotechnology ; *DNA Breaks, Double-Stranded ; DNA, Plant/*genetics ; Genome, Plant ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Viroids/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid26094058,
year = {2015},
author = {Tanghe, KB},
title = {Mendel at the sesquicentennial of 'Versuche über Pflanzen-Hybriden' (1865): The root of the biggest legend in the history of science.},
journal = {Endeavour},
volume = {39},
number = {2},
pages = {106-115},
doi = {10.1016/j.endeavour.2015.05.004},
pmid = {26094058},
issn = {1873-1929},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; Humans ; Male ; Mythology/*psychology ; },
abstract = {In 1965, Mendel was still celebrated as the undisputed founder of genetics. In the ensuing 50 years, scholars questioned and undermined this traditional interpretation of his experiments with hybrid plants, without, however, managing to replace it: at the sesquicentennial of the presentation of his 'Versuche' (1865), the Moravian friar remains, to a vast majority, the heroic Father of genetics or at least some kind of geneticist. This exceptionally inert myth is nourished by ontological intuitions but can only continue to flourish, thanks to a long-standing conceptual void in the historiography of biology. It is merely a symptom of this more fundamental problem.},
}
@article {pmid26090739,
year = {2015},
author = {Nelson, NC},
title = {A Knockout Experiment: Disciplinary Divides and Experimental Skill in Animal Behaviour Genetics.},
journal = {Medical history},
volume = {59},
number = {3},
pages = {465-485},
doi = {10.1017/mdh.2015.30},
pmid = {26090739},
issn = {2048-8343},
mesh = {Animals ; *Behavior, Animal ; Biomedical Research/*history/standards ; Genetics, Behavioral/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Mice ; Mice, Knockout ; Models, Animal ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Professional Competence ; },
abstract = {In the early 1990s, a set of new techniques for manipulating mouse DNA allowed researchers to 'knock out' specific genes and observe the effects of removing them on a live mouse. In animal behaviour genetics, questions about how to deploy these techniques to study the molecular basis of behaviour became quite controversial, with a number of key methodological issues dissecting the interdisciplinary research field along disciplinary lines. This paper examines debates that took place during the 1990s between a predominately North American group of molecular biologists and animal behaviourists around how to design, conduct, and interpret behavioural knockout experiments. Drawing from and extending Harry Collins's work on how research communities negotiate what counts as a 'well-done experiment,' I argue that the positions practitioners took on questions of experimental skill reflected not only the experimental traditions they were trained in but also their differing ontological and epistemological commitments. Different assumptions about the nature of gene action, eg., were tied to different positions in the knockout mouse debates on how to implement experimental controls. I conclude by showing that examining representations of skill in the context of a community's knowledge commitments sheds light on some of the contradictory ways in which contemporary animal behaviour geneticists talk about their own laboratory work as a highly skilled endeavour that also could be mechanised, as easy to perform and yet difficult to perform well.},
}
@article {pmid26089021,
year = {2015},
author = {Self, A and Etienne-Manneville, S},
title = {Alan Hall (1952-2015), an Englishman in New York.},
journal = {The EMBO journal},
volume = {34},
number = {13},
pages = {1735-1736},
doi = {10.15252/embj.201570020},
pmid = {26089021},
issn = {1460-2075},
mesh = {*Biochemistry/history ; Biomedical Research/history ; Emigrants and Immigrants ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Interferons/genetics ; *Laboratory Personnel ; *Medical Oncology/history ; Molecular Biology/history ; New York City ; United Kingdom ; },
}
@article {pmid26088923,
year = {2015},
author = {Hackam, DJ},
title = {The dawn of the third renaissance in surgery.},
journal = {Surgery},
volume = {158},
number = {2},
pages = {317-322},
doi = {10.1016/j.surg.2015.05.001},
pmid = {26088923},
issn = {1532-7361},
mesh = {Computers/history ; Creativity ; Europe ; General Surgery/*history ; History, 17th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/history ; Humans ; Inventions/history ; Printing/history/instrumentation ; Textbooks as Topic/history ; United States ; },
abstract = {In this presidential address, I will share my belief that our proud and noble field stands at the dawn of a great renaissance. I further believe that this is the third such renaissance that has occurred in surgery. As described herein, the first renaissance in surgery occurred during the 1600s, which involved a transformation in operative care unlike anything that had been seen since Roman times. This first renaissance was triggered by tumultuous world events but was spurred on by the invention of the printing press. The second renaissance occurred during the 1980s and was triggered by the invention of the computer, which is of equal significance to the printing press 240 years earlier. I believe that this third renaissance shares with the earlier renaissances its transformative nature and its reaction to turmoil, both in the medical and nonmedical worlds. This is a renaissance driven by science, by creativity, and by innovation—resources that are never in short supply within our great profession.},
}
@article {pmid26088490,
year = {2015},
author = {Snyder, A},
title = {Alexander Rich.},
journal = {Lancet (London, England)},
volume = {385},
number = {9984},
pages = {2248},
doi = {10.1016/S0140-6736(15)61056-X},
pmid = {26088490},
issn = {1474-547X},
mesh = {Biophysics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Massachusetts ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26087616,
year = {2015},
author = {Shestakov, SV},
title = {[On the 50th Anniversary of the "Genetika"].},
journal = {Genetika},
volume = {51},
number = {4},
pages = {395-396},
pmid = {26087616},
issn = {0016-6758},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Periodicals as Topic/history ; },
}
@article {pmid26086052,
year = {2015},
author = {MacIntyre, RJ and Gearhart, JD and Effron, JW and O' Brien, SJ and Fogleman, J},
title = {In Memory of Bruce Wallace: 1920–2015.},
journal = {The Journal of heredity},
volume = {106},
number = {3},
pages = {331-332},
pmid = {26086052},
issn = {1465-7333},
mesh = {Animals ; Drosophila melanogaster/genetics ; Genetics/*history ; Genetics, Population ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid26073145,
year = {2015},
author = {Gayon, J and Gros, F and Morange, M},
title = {Jacques Monod: fifty years after - foreword.},
journal = {Comptes rendus biologies},
volume = {338},
number = {6},
pages = {369-371},
doi = {10.1016/j.crvi.2015.05.002},
pmid = {26073145},
issn = {1768-3238},
mesh = {Enzymes/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Nobel Prize ; },
}
@article {pmid26065680,
year = {2015},
author = {Gryglewski, G},
title = {[Gregor Gryglewski is Researcher of the Month, June 2015].},
journal = {Wiener klinische Wochenschrift},
volume = {127},
number = {11-12},
pages = {499-500},
doi = {10.1007/s00508-015-0826-3},
pmid = {26065680},
issn = {1613-7671},
mesh = {Austria ; *Awards and Prizes ; Depression/*history ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Molecular Imaging/*history ; Neurosciences/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26065265,
year = {2015},
author = {Broude, N and Frolova, LIu and Rubtsov, PM},
title = {[In memory of Tat'iana Valdimirovna Venkstern].},
journal = {Molekuliarnaia biologiia},
volume = {49},
number = {2},
pages = {366-367},
pmid = {26065265},
issn = {0026-8984},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Portraits as Topic ; Russia ; },
}
@article {pmid26057974,
year = {2015},
author = {Zhang, S and Wittig, B},
title = {Alexander Rich 1924-2015.},
journal = {Nature biotechnology},
volume = {33},
number = {6},
pages = {593-598},
doi = {10.1038/nbt.3262},
pmid = {26057974},
issn = {1546-1696},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid26056161,
year = {2015},
author = {Perbal, L},
title = {The case of the gene: Postgenomics between modernity and postmodernity.},
journal = {EMBO reports},
volume = {16},
number = {7},
pages = {777-781},
doi = {10.15252/embr.201540179},
pmid = {26056161},
issn = {1469-3178},
mesh = {*Genes ; Genetic Research ; *Genetics/history/trends ; *Genomics/history/trends ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Postmodernism ; },
}
@article {pmid26050426,
year = {2015},
author = {Gilgenkrantz, S},
title = {[Jacques Monod: some unpublished pages of his life].},
journal = {Histoire des sciences medicales},
volume = {49},
number = {1},
pages = {41-51},
pmid = {26050426},
issn = {0440-8888},
mesh = {Correspondence as Topic/*history ; *Famous Persons ; France ; History, 20th Century ; Interpersonal Relations/history ; Literature, Modern/*history ; Molecular Biology/*history ; World War II ; },
abstract = {The friendship and affinity of thought between Albert Camus and Jacques Monod were little highlighted in France. A book published in the U.S. in 2013 over the period of the Second World War in France shows their importance. It seemed useful to collect the elements of correspondence and writings reflecting their common concerns,frequent meetings and friendship.},
}
@article {pmid26046976,
year = {2015},
author = {Matijašević, Z and Zeiger, E},
title = {Marija Alačević (April 19, 1929-February 25, 2015).},
journal = {Mutation research. Genetic toxicology and environmental mutagenesis},
volume = {784-785},
number = {},
pages = {45-46},
doi = {10.1016/j.mrgentox.2015.03.014},
pmid = {26046976},
issn = {1879-3592},
mesh = {Biotechnology/*history ; Genetics, Microbial/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Streptomyces ; Yugoslavia ; },
}
@article {pmid26042238,
year = {2015},
author = {Rosbash, M},
title = {Ronald J. Konopka (1947–2015).},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {161},
number = {2},
pages = {187-188},
pmid = {26042238},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {Animals ; Biology/*history ; *Circadian Rhythm ; Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Huntington Disease/genetics/history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid26035858,
year = {2015},
author = {Boycott, K and Cifra, A},
title = {Looking for a needle in a haystack--tackling rare diseases: an interview with Kym Boycott.},
journal = {Disease models & mechanisms},
volume = {8},
number = {5},
pages = {417-419},
doi = {10.1242/dmm.020925},
pmid = {26035858},
issn = {1754-8411},
mesh = {Animals ; Canada ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Rare Diseases/*genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid26035802,
year = {2015},
author = {Simpson, JL},
title = {Reproducing genetics.},
journal = {Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics},
volume = {17},
number = {6},
pages = {512-514},
doi = {10.1038/gim.2015.37},
pmid = {26035802},
issn = {1530-0366},
mesh = {*Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Obstetrics and Gynecology Department, Hospital ; Prenatal Diagnosis ; *Reproduction/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid26031601,
year = {2016},
author = {Widdig, A and Kessler, MJ and Bercovitch, FB and Berard, JD and Duggleby, C and Nürnberg, P and Rawlins, RG and Sauermann, U and Wang, Q and Krawczak, M and Schmidtke, J},
title = {Genetic studies on the Cayo Santiago rhesus macaques: A review of 40 years of research.},
journal = {American journal of primatology},
volume = {78},
number = {1},
pages = {44-62},
doi = {10.1002/ajp.22424},
pmid = {26031601},
issn = {1098-2345},
support = {P40-RR-01293/RR/NCRR NIH HHS/United States ; P40-RR-03640/RR/NCRR NIH HHS/United States ; RR-712003/RR/NCRR NIH HHS/United States ; RR-72115/RR/NCRR NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Macaca mulatta/*genetics ; Puerto Rico ; },
abstract = {Genetic studies not only contribute substantially to our current understanding of the natural variation in behavior and health in many species, they also provide the basis of numerous in vivo models of human traits. Despite the many challenges posed by the high level of biological and social complexity, a long lifespan and difficult access in the field, genetic studies of primates are particularly rewarding because of the close evolutionary relatedness of these species to humans. The free-ranging rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta) population on Cayo Santiago (CS), Puerto Rico, provides a unique resource in this respect because several of the abovementioned caveats are of either minor importance there, or lacking altogether, thereby allowing long-term genetic research in a primate population under constant surveillance since 1956. This review summarizes more than 40 years of genetic research carried out on CS, from early blood group typing and the genetic characterization of skeletal material via population-wide paternity testing with DNA fingerprints and short tandem repeats (STRs) to the analysis of the highly polymorphic DQB1 locus within the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). The results of the paternity studies also facilitated subsequent studies of male dominance and other factors influencing male reproductive success, of male reproductive skew, paternal kin bias, and mechanisms of paternal kin recognition. More recently, the CS macaques have been the subjects of functional genetic and gene expression analyses and have played an important role in behavioral and quantitative genetic studies. In addition, the CS colony has been used as a natural model for human adult-onset macular degeneration, glaucoma, and circadian rhythm disorder. Our review finishes off with a discussion of potential future directions of research on CS, including the transition from STRs to single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) typing and whole genome sequencing.},
}
@article {pmid26031181,
year = {2014},
author = {Barahona, A},
title = {[The program of Genetics and radiobiology of the National Commission of Nuclear Energy in Mexico, and the work of Alfonso Leon de Garay].},
journal = {Archives internationales d'histoire des sciences},
volume = {64},
number = {172-173},
pages = {481-495},
pmid = {26031181},
issn = {0003-9810},
mesh = {Advisory Committees/history/organization & administration ; Animals ; Drosophila ; *Genetics/history/organization & administration ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Mexico ; *Nuclear Energy ; Radiation Genetics/history/organization & administration ; *Radiobiology/history/organization & administration ; },
}
@article {pmid26013437,
year = {2015},
author = {Bock von Wülfingen, B},
title = {Observing temporal order in living processes: on the role of time in embryology on the cell level in the 1870s and post-2000.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {37},
number = {1},
pages = {87-104},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-014-0054-6},
pmid = {26013437},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Embryology/*history ; Europe ; Fertilization ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Reproduction ; Time Factors ; United States ; },
abstract = {The article analyses the role of time in the visual culture of two phases in embryological research: at the end of the nineteenth century, and in the years around 2000. The first case study involves microscopical cytology, the second reproductive genetics. In the 1870s we observe the first of a series of abstractions in research methodology on conception and development, moving from a method propagated as the observation of the "real" living object to the production of stained and fixated objects that are then aligned in temporal order. This process of abstraction ultimately fosters a dissociation between space and time in the research phenomenon, which after 2000 is problematized and explicitly tackled in embryology. Mass data computing made it possible partially to re-include temporal complexity in reproductive genetics in certain, though not all, fields of reproductive genetics. Here research question, instrument and modelling interact in ways that produce very different temporal relationships. Specifically, this article suggests that the different techniques in the late nineteenth century and around 2000 were employed in order to align the time of the researcher with that of the phenomenon and to economize the researcher's work in interaction with the research material's own temporal challenges.},
}
@article {pmid26013436,
year = {2015},
author = {Kampf, A},
title = {Times of danger: embryos, sperm and precarious reproduction ca. 1870s-1910s.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {37},
number = {1},
pages = {68-86},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-014-0055-5},
pmid = {26013436},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Embryology/*history ; Eugenics/*history ; Europe ; Female ; Genetics/history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Knowledge ; Male ; *Politics ; *Reproduction ; Spermatozoa/physiology ; },
abstract = {This paper discusses the rise and fall of the theory of paternal transmission, drawing attention to the hitherto underresearched debates about the importance and impact of male-mediated harm to the embryo in reproduction that peaked around the turn of the twentieth century. The focus is on the implications of the twin "great social evils," syphilis and alcohol, which converged at the time of a general transformation of medicine into experimental science and a concomitant rise in new concepts of heredity. Looking at the way in which the issue of time added to profound changes which were linked to particular visions of society and changes in the politics of gender at the turn of the century, I examine the asymmetrical relationship of sociopolitical and epistemological dimensions of time and reproduction. The paper shows how these debates were positioned within the wider context of eugenics and in relation to concepts of male reproduction that involved fundamental political, social and moral dimensions.},
}
@article {pmid26013314,
year = {2015},
author = {Suárez-Díaz Edna, and García-Deister Vivette, },
title = {That 70s show: regulation, evolution and development beyond molecular genetics.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {36},
number = {4},
pages = {503-524},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-014-0051-9},
pmid = {26013314},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {DNA, Recombinant/history ; Eukaryota/genetics ; *Evolution, Molecular ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {This paper argues that the "long 1970s" (1969-1983) is an important though often overlooked period in the development of a rich landscape in the research of metabolism, development, and evolution. The period is marked by: shrinking public funding of basic science, shifting research agendas in molecular biology, the incorporation of new phenomena and experimental tools from previous biological research at the molecular level, and the development of recombinant DNA techniques. Research was reoriented towards eukaryotic cells and development, and in particular towards "giant" RNA processing and transcription. We will here focus on three different models of developmental regulation published in that period: the two models of eukaryotic genetic regulation at the transcriptional level that were developed by Georgii P. Georgiev on the one hand, and by Roy Britten and Eric Davidson on the other; and the model of genetic sufficiency and evolution of regulatory genes proposed by Emile Zuckerkandl. These three bases illustrate the range of exploratory hypotheses that characterised the challenging landscape of gene regulation in the 1970s, a period that in hindsight can be labelled as transitional, between the biology at the laboratory bench of the preceding period, and the biology of genetic engineering and intensive data-driven research that followed.},
}
@article {pmid26013313,
year = {2015},
author = {Gausemeier, B},
title = {Pedigrees of madness: the study of heredity in nineteenth and early twentieth century psychiatry.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {36},
number = {4},
pages = {467-483},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-014-0050-x},
pmid = {26013313},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Genetic Diseases, Inborn/*history ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Mental Disorders/genetics/*history ; Psychiatry/*history/methods ; Statistics as Topic/*history ; },
abstract = {This article discusses the development of the statistical methods employed by psychiatrists to study heredity as a causative factor of mental diseases. It argues that psychiatric asylums and clinics were the first institutions in which human heredity became the object of systematic research. It also highlights the different concepts of heredity prevalent in the psychiatric community. The first of four parts traces how heredity became a central category of asylum statistics in the first half of the nineteenth century. The second part deals with attempts to introduce new methods of surveying in order to generate more precise data about psychopathological inheritance in the 1860s and 1870s. The third part discusses how, by the end of the nineteenth century, a widespread discontent with the results of asylum statistics led to an increasing interest in the use of family studies. Finally, the fourth part examines the impact of Mendelian theory on psychiatric statistics in the early twentieth century.},
}
@article {pmid26013197,
year = {2015},
author = {Volpone, A},
title = {Chromosomenindividualität or Entmischung? The debate between Paolo Della Valle and Edmund B. Wilson.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {36},
number = {3},
pages = {404-414},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-014-0042-x},
pmid = {26013197},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Cell Biology/*history ; Chromosomes/*genetics ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Italy ; United States ; },
abstract = {At the beginning of the twentieth century, the Italian cytologist Paolo Della Valle developed a theory of instable chromosomes (teoria dei cromosomi labili). He radically criticized the so-called Sutton-Boveri hypothesis (Martins and Martins, Genetics and Molecular Biology, 22:261-271, 1999), focusing on numerical constancy in the species and individuality. On the basis of bibliographical review and personal observations, he maintained that the chromosomes were neither stable bodies, nor permanent structures, but transitory cellular materials, resulting from the periodical rearrangement of the chromatin during the cell division. German and English-speaking biologists reacted. The paper shows some content of the argumentations used by Thomas H. Montgomery and especially Edmund B. Wilson. The discussion was characterized by the same data which is interpretedby different scholars in different ways. And the point is that no one of them had the decisive test to demonstrate his own point of view. Wilson simply invoked on his behalf a certain 'common sense', defending at least a 'high degree of constancy'. The debate waned along with the reception of Morgan's chromosome theory of heredity, but only the advent of molecular biology definitively stated the nature of chromosomes as permanent structures of the cell.},
}
@article {pmid26013196,
year = {2015},
author = {Dröscher, A},
title = {Of germ-plasm and zymoplasm: August Weismann, Carlo Emery and the debate about the transmission of acquired characteristics.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {36},
number = {3},
pages = {394-403},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-014-0046-6},
pmid = {26013196},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Biological Evolution ; Developmental Biology/*history ; Genetics/*history ; Germany ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Italy ; },
abstract = {In this essay I discuss the contents and the context of Italian zoologist and entomologist Carlo Emery's discussion of the germ-plasm theory. August Weismann considered him one of his very few creditable supporters, and encouraged him to publish his theoretical reflections. In his Gedanken zur Descendenz- und Vererbungstheorie, which appeared between 1893 and 1903 as a series of five essays in the journal Biologisches Zentralblatt, Emery developed a very personal account, applying the concept of determinants to problems like atavism, sexual dimorphism, speciation, geographical isolation, transmission of characters, and putting forward, as early as 1903, the idea of a genetic program.},
}
@article {pmid26003505,
year = {2015},
author = {Gayon, J},
title = {Enzymatic cybernetics: an unpublished work by Jacques Monod.},
journal = {Comptes rendus biologies},
volume = {338},
number = {6},
pages = {398-405},
doi = {10.1016/j.crvi.2015.04.007},
pmid = {26003505},
issn = {1768-3238},
mesh = {Cybernetics/*history ; Enzymes/*physiology ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {In 1959, Jacques Monod wrote a manuscript entitled Cybernétique enzymatique [Enzymatic cybernetics]. Never published, this unpublished manuscript presents a synthesis of how Monod interpreted enzymatic adaptation just before the publication of the famous papers of the 1960s on the operon. In addition, Monod offers an example of a philosophy of biology immersed in scientific investigation. Monod's philosophical thoughts are classified into two categories, methodological and ontological. On the methodological side, Monod explicitly hints at his preferences regarding the scientific method in general: hypothetical-deductive method, and use of theoretical models. He also makes heuristic proposals regarding molecular biology: the need to analyse the phenomena in question at the level of individual cells, and the dual aspect of all biological explanation, functional and evolutionary. Ontological issues deal with the notions of information and genetic determinism, "cellular memory", the irrelevance of the notion of "living matter", and the usefulness of a cybernetic comprehension of molecular biology.},
}
@article {pmid26002905,
year = {2015},
author = {Fogg, CN and Kovats, DE},
title = {Message from the ISCB: 2015 ISCB Accomplishment by a Senior Scientist Award: Cyrus Chothia.},
journal = {Bioinformatics (Oxford, England)},
volume = {31},
number = {13},
pages = {2238-2239},
doi = {10.1093/bioinformatics/btv218},
pmid = {26002905},
issn = {1367-4811},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; *Biomedical Research ; Computational Biology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; *Societies, Scientific ; },
abstract = {UNLABELLED: The International Society for Computational Biology (ISCB; http://www.iscb.org) honors a senior scientist annually for his or her outstanding achievements with the ISCB Accomplishment by a Senior Scientist Award. This award recognizes a leader in the field of computational biology for his or her significant contributions to the community through research, service and education. Cyrus Chothia, an emeritus scientist at the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology and emeritus fellow of Wolfson College at Cambridge University, England, is the 2015 ISCB Accomplishment by a Senior Scientist Award winner.Chothia was selected by the Awards Committee, which is chaired by Dr Bonnie Berger of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He will receive his award and deliver a keynote presentation at 2015 Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology/European Conference on Computational Biology in Dublin, Ireland, in July 2015.

CONTACT: dkovats@iscb.org.},
}
@article {pmid25993552,
year = {2015},
author = {Licinio, J and Wong, ML},
title = {Molecular Psychiatry: Twenty years of progress from bench to clinic.},
journal = {Molecular psychiatry},
volume = {20},
number = {6},
pages = {657},
doi = {10.1038/mp.2015.60},
pmid = {25993552},
issn = {1476-5578},
mesh = {Animals ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mental Disorders/genetics/history/therapy ; *Molecular Biology/history/methods/trends ; Psychiatry/*history/trends ; },
}
@article {pmid25988897,
year = {2015},
author = {Fitzgerald, KA},
title = {Paula Pitha-Rowe 1937-2015.},
journal = {Nature immunology},
volume = {16},
number = {6},
pages = {591},
doi = {10.1038/ni.3173},
pmid = {25988897},
issn = {1529-2916},
mesh = {Allergy and Immunology/*history ; Czechoslovakia ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Interferons/genetics/*history/immunology ; Molecular Biology/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25972202,
year = {2015},
author = {Spang, A},
title = {Anniversary of the discovery of sec mutants by Novick and Schekman.},
journal = {Molecular biology of the cell},
volume = {26},
number = {10},
pages = {1783-1785},
doi = {10.1091/mbc.E14-11-1511},
pmid = {25972202},
issn = {1939-4586},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Mutation ; Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics/metabolism ; Secretory Pathway/*genetics ; },
abstract = {This year marks the 35th anniversary of the isolation of 23 SEC genes. These genes all encode key regulators of the secretory pathway, and much of our knowledge of the secretory pathway is based on this initial discovery. The identification of the SEC genes is a result of combining genetics, biochemistry, and electron microscopy in a very clever way. Scientists have been busy ever since seeking to understand the function and regulation of these genes and to identify further key players in the process. Although most of the machinery acting along the secretory pathway is known and its function generally understood, knowledge of regulation of the pathway under various conditions is still scarce and will keep researchers busy for years to come.},
}
@article {pmid25970935,
year = {2015},
author = {Grigoriu, BD},
title = {Theragnostics--a silent revolution.},
journal = {Revista medico-chirurgicala a Societatii de Medici si Naturalisti din Iasi},
volume = {119},
number = {1},
pages = {7-8},
pmid = {25970935},
issn = {0048-7848},
mesh = {Data Collection/history ; Disease/etiology/*history ; *Drug Design ; Europe ; Greece ; History, 18th Century ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; History, Ancient ; Humans ; Italy ; Pathology/history ; *Pharmacogenetics/history ; Philosophy, Medical/*history ; *Precision Medicine/history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25970269,
year = {2015},
author = {Sithaldeen, R and Ackermann, RR and Bishop, JM},
title = {Pleistocene aridification cycles shaped the contemporary genetic architecture of Southern African baboons.},
journal = {PloS one},
volume = {10},
number = {5},
pages = {e0123207},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0123207},
pmid = {25970269},
issn = {1932-6203},
mesh = {Africa, Southern ; Animals ; Biodiversity ; Climate ; DNA, Mitochondrial/*genetics/history ; Female ; *Genetic Speciation ; History, Ancient ; Male ; Papio/classification/*genetics ; Papio ursinus/classification/*genetics ; Phylogeny ; Phylogeography/history ; Temperature ; },
abstract = {Plio-Pleistocene environmental change influenced the evolutionary history of many animal lineages in Africa, highlighting key roles for both climate and tectonics in the evolution of Africa's faunal diversity. Here, we explore diversification in the southern African chacma baboon Papio ursinus sensu lato and reveal a dominant role for increasingly arid landscapes during past glacial cycles in shaping contemporary genetic structure. Recent work on baboons (Papio spp.) supports complex lineage structuring with a dominant pulse of diversification occurring 1-2Ma, and yet the link to palaeoenvironmental change remains largely untested. Phylogeographic reconstruction based on mitochondrial DNA sequence data supports a scenario where chacma baboon populations were likely restricted to refugia during periods of regional cooling and drying through the Late Pleistocene. The two lineages of chacma baboon, ursinus and griseipes, are strongly geographically structured, and demographic reconstruction together with spatial analysis of genetic variation point to possible climate-driven isolating events where baboons may have retreated to more optimum conditions during cooler, drier periods. Our analysis highlights a period of continuous population growth beginning in the Middle to Late Pleistocene in both the ursinus and the PG2 griseipes lineages. All three clades identified in the study then enter a state of declining population size (Nef) through to the Holocene; this is particularly marked in the last 20,000 years, most likely coincident with the Last Glacial Maximum. The pattern recovered here conforms to expectations based on the dynamic regional climate trends in southern Africa through the Pleistocene and provides further support for complex patterns of diversification in the region's biodiversity.},
}
@article {pmid25961092,
year = {2015},
author = {Brockman, HE},
title = {Frederick J. de Serres Jr. (1929–2014).},
journal = {Mutation research. Reviews in mutation research},
volume = {763},
number = {},
pages = {321-322},
pmid = {25961092},
issn = {1388-2139},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Mutagenesis ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25955337,
year = {2014},
author = {Brent, L},
title = {Ray David Owen (1915-2014): geneticist and immunologist. A tribute to a true pioneer.},
journal = {Transplantation},
volume = {98},
number = {12},
pages = {1246-1247},
doi = {10.1097/TP.0000000000000538},
pmid = {25955337},
issn = {1534-6080},
mesh = {Allergy and Immunology/*history ; Animals ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25953338,
year = {2015},
author = {Baldwin, RL and von Hippel, PH},
title = {John Schellman and the birth of protein folding.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {112},
number = {22},
pages = {6776-6777},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1506481112},
pmid = {25953338},
issn = {1091-6490},
support = {R01 GM015792/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Protein Folding ; Proteomics/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid25943115,
year = {2015},
author = {Brown, JH and Catterall, WA and Conn, PJ and Cull-Candy, SG and Dingledine, R and Harden, TK and Insel, PA and Milligan, G and Traynelis, SF},
title = {The First 50 Years of Molecular Pharmacology.},
journal = {Molecular pharmacology},
volume = {88},
number = {1},
pages = {139-140},
doi = {10.1124/mol.115.099564},
pmid = {25943115},
issn = {1521-0111},
mesh = {Animals ; Drug Delivery Systems ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Periodicals as Topic/*trends ; Pharmaceutical Preparations/chemistry ; Pharmacogenetics/*history ; },
abstract = {In this Perspective, former and current editors of Molecular Pharmacology, together with the guest editors for this 50th Anniversary Issue, provide a historical overview of the journal since its founding in 1965. The substantial impact that Molecular Pharmacology has had on the field of pharmacology as well as on biomedical science is discussed, as is the broad scope of the journal. The authors conclude that, true to the original goals for the journal, Molecular Pharmacology today remains an outstanding venue for work that provides a mechanistic understanding of drugs, molecular probes, and their biologic targets.},
}
@article {pmid25939053,
year = {2015},
author = {Bodmer, W},
title = {A Mathematician's Odyssey.},
journal = {Annual review of genomics and human genetics},
volume = {16},
number = {},
pages = {1-29},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-genom-090314-045856},
pmid = {25939053},
issn = {1545-293X},
mesh = {Autoimmune Diseases/genetics ; Biostatistics/*history/methods ; Chromosome Mapping ; Genetics, Population/*history/methods ; HLA Antigens/genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project ; Humans ; Mathematics ; Models, Theoretical ; Molecular Biology/history ; Neoplasms/genetics ; Primula/genetics ; United Kingdom ; },
abstract = {In this overview of my research, I have aimed to give the background as to how I came to be involved in my various areas of interest, with an emphasis on the early phases of my career, which largely determined my future directions. I had the enormous good fortune to have worked under two of the most outstanding scientists of the twentieth century, R.A. Fisher and Joshua Lederberg. From mathematics and statistics, I went to population genetics and the early use of computers for modeling and simulation. Molecular biology took me into the laboratory and eventually to somatic cell genetics and human gene mapping. One chance encounter led me into the HLA field and another led me into research on cancer, especially colorectal cancer. On the way, I became a champion of the Human Genome Project and of the need for scientists to help promote the public understanding of science.},
}
@article {pmid25937445,
year = {2015},
author = {Ayub, Q and Mezzavilla, M and Pagani, L and Haber, M and Mohyuddin, A and Khaliq, S and Mehdi, SQ and Tyler-Smith, C},
title = {The Kalash genetic isolate: ancient divergence, drift, and selection.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {5},
pages = {775-783},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.03.012},
pmid = {25937445},
issn = {1537-6605},
support = {098051//Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Asia ; Asian Continental Ancestry Group/genetics ; Chromosomes, Human, Y/*genetics ; DNA, Mitochondrial/*genetics ; Demography ; European Continental Ancestry Group/genetics ; *Genetic Drift ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Haplotypes ; History, Ancient ; Humans ; Male ; Pakistan ; Phylogeny ; },
abstract = {The Kalash represent an enigmatic isolated population of Indo-European speakers who have been living for centuries in the Hindu Kush mountain ranges of present-day Pakistan. Previous Y chromosome and mitochondrial DNA markers provided no support for their claimed Greek descent following Alexander III of Macedon's invasion of this region, and analysis of autosomal loci provided evidence of a strong genetic bottleneck. To understand their origins and demography further, we genotyped 23 unrelated Kalash samples on the Illumina HumanOmni2.5M-8 BeadChip and sequenced one male individual at high coverage on an Illumina HiSeq 2000. Comparison with published data from ancient hunter-gatherers and European farmers showed that the Kalash share genetic drift with the Paleolithic Siberian hunter-gatherers and might represent an extremely drifted ancient northern Eurasian population that also contributed to European and Near Eastern ancestry. Since the split from other South Asian populations, the Kalash have maintained a low long-term effective population size (2,319-2,603) and experienced no detectable gene flow from their geographic neighbors in Pakistan or from other extant Eurasian populations. The mean time of divergence between the Kalash and other populations currently residing in this region was estimated to be 11,800 (95% confidence interval = 10,600-12,600) years ago, and thus they represent present-day descendants of some of the earliest migrants into the Indian sub-continent from West Asia.},
}
@article {pmid25931208,
year = {2015},
author = {Cassata, F},
title = {"A Cold Spring Harbor in Europe." EURATOM, UNESCO and the Foundation of EMBO.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {48},
number = {4},
pages = {539-573},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-015-9408-5},
pmid = {25931208},
issn = {1573-0387},
mesh = {Biological Science Disciplines/*history/organization & administration ; Europe ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Societies, Scientific/*history/organization & administration ; United Nations/history ; },
abstract = {This article explores the problem of the foundation of the European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO), by reconstructing a broader institutional framework, which includes other international actors--EURATOM, UNESCO and the International Laboratory of Genetics and Biophysics (ILGB) in Naples--and a relevant, but still neglected figure, the Italian geneticist Adriano Buzzati-Traverso (1913-1983). The article considers the tension between centralized and federal models of organization in the field of life sciences not just as an EMBO internal controversy, but rather as a structural issue of European scientific cooperation in fundamental biology in the early 1960s. Along with EMBO, the article analyzes in particular the EURATOM Biology Division Program and the constitution of UNESCO International Cell Research Organization (ICRO). Adriano Buzzati-Traverso, as founder of ILGB and scientific consultant of EURATOM and UNESCO, played a crucial role in the complex negotiation which ultimately led to the foundation of EMBO. A synchronic treatment of ILGB, EURATOM, UNESCO-ICRO and EMBO opens a window on the early 1960s institutional configuration of molecular biology in Europe, showing how it basically incorporated the "Cold Spring Harbor" decentralized model rather than reproducing the "CERN" centralized model.},
}
@article {pmid25926702,
year = {2015},
author = {Bloom, K},
title = {Anniversary of the discovery/isolation of the yeast centromere by Clarke and Carbon.},
journal = {Molecular biology of the cell},
volume = {26},
number = {9},
pages = {1575-1577},
doi = {10.1091/mbc.E14-11-1512},
pmid = {25926702},
issn = {1939-4586},
support = {R37 GM032238/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; Centromere/*genetics ; Chromosomes, Fungal/genetics ; DNA, Fungal/genetics/ultrastructure ; Fungal Proteins/physiology ; Genetic Research/history ; History, 20th Century ; Laboratory Personnel ; Saccharomycetales/*genetics ; },
abstract = {The first centromere was isolated 35 years ago by Louise Clarke and John Carbon from budding yeast. They embarked on their journey with rudimentary molecular tools (by today's standards) and little knowledge of the structure of a chromosome, much less the nature of a centromere. Their discovery opened up a new field, as centromeres have now been isolated from fungi and numerous plants and animals, including mammals. Budding yeast and several other fungi have small centromeres with short, well-defined sequences, known as point centromeres, whereas regional centromeres span several kilobases up to megabases and do not seem to have DNA sequence specificity. Centromeres are at the heart of artificial chromosomes, and we have seen the birth of synthetic centromeres in budding and fission yeast and mammals. The diversity in centromeres throughout phylogeny belie conserved functions that are only beginning to be understood.},
}
@article {pmid25912960,
year = {2015},
author = {Loison, L},
title = {Why did Jacques Monod make the choice of mechanistic determinism?.},
journal = {Comptes rendus biologies},
volume = {338},
number = {6},
pages = {391-397},
doi = {10.1016/j.crvi.2015.03.008},
pmid = {25912960},
issn = {1768-3238},
mesh = {DNA/*chemistry ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Proteins/*chemistry ; },
abstract = {The development of molecular biology placed in the foreground a mechanistic and deterministic conception of the functioning of macromolecules. In this article, I show that this conception was neither obvious, nor necessary. Taking Jacques Monod as a case study, I detail the way he gradually came loose from a statistical understanding of determinism to finally support a mechanistic understanding. The reasons of the choice made by Monod at the beginning of the 1950s can be understood only in the light of the general theoretical schema supported by the concept of mechanistic determinism. This schema articulates three fundamental notions for Monod, namely that of the rigidity of the sequence of the genetic program, that of the intrinsic stability of macromolecules (DNA and proteins), and that of the specificity of molecular interactions.},
}
@article {pmid25908117,
year = {2015},
author = {Keller, EF},
title = {Doing justice to allosteric regulation.},
journal = {Comptes rendus biologies},
volume = {338},
number = {6},
pages = {385-390},
doi = {10.1016/j.crvi.2015.03.009},
pmid = {25908117},
issn = {1768-3238},
mesh = {Allosteric Regulation ; DNA/*physiology ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Proteins/*chemistry/metabolism ; },
abstract = {Jacques Monod gave us not only our first regulatory system, but also our first smart molecules - i.e., he gave us allosteric proteins. But both of these contributions hung in a certain tension with his primary commitments. In particular, I focus here on the ways in which his ontological commitments constrained his thinking about the power of allostery. Although he wrote that "so far as regulation through allosteric interaction is concerned, everything is possible", for him, not everything was conceivable. In particular, what was not conceivable was a challenge to the primacy of DNA.},
}
@article {pmid25903461,
year = {2015},
author = {Travers, A and Muskhelishvili, G},
title = {DNA structure and function.},
journal = {The FEBS journal},
volume = {282},
number = {12},
pages = {2279-2295},
doi = {10.1111/febs.13307},
pmid = {25903461},
issn = {1742-4658},
support = {MC_U105178783//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Animals ; Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly ; DNA/*chemistry/metabolism ; DNA, Superhelical/chemistry/metabolism ; Energy Metabolism ; *Genetic Phenomena ; Genetics/*history ; Genome ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Nucleic Acid Conformation ; },
abstract = {The proposal of a double-helical structure for DNA over 60 years ago provided an eminently satisfying explanation for the heritability of genetic information. But why is DNA, and not RNA, now the dominant biological information store? We argue that, in addition to its coding function, the ability of DNA, unlike RNA, to adopt a B-DNA structure confers advantages both for information accessibility and for packaging. The information encoded by DNA is both digital - the precise base specifying, for example, amino acid sequences - and analogue. The latter determines the sequence-dependent physicochemical properties of DNA, for example, its stiffness and susceptibility to strand separation. Most importantly, DNA chirality enables the formation of supercoiling under torsional stress. We review recent evidence suggesting that DNA supercoiling, particularly that generated by DNA translocases, is a major driver of gene regulation and patterns of chromosomal gene organization, and in its guise as a promoter of DNA packaging enables DNA to act as an energy store to facilitate the passage of translocating enzymes such as RNA polymerase.},
}
@article {pmid25900809,
year = {2015},
author = {Opitz, JM},
title = {Remembered: F. Clarke Fraser.},
journal = {American journal of medical genetics. Part A},
volume = {167A},
number = {10},
pages = {2229-2230},
doi = {10.1002/ajmg.a.37091},
pmid = {25900809},
issn = {1552-4833},
mesh = {Genetic Testing/*history ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25900095,
year = {2015},
author = {Wyatt, C and Bartoszek, EM and Yaksi, E},
title = {Methods for studying the zebrafish brain: past, present and future.},
journal = {The European journal of neuroscience},
volume = {42},
number = {2},
pages = {1746-1763},
doi = {10.1111/ejn.12932},
pmid = {25900095},
issn = {1460-9568},
mesh = {Animals ; Brain/*physiology ; DNA/genetics/metabolism ; Gene Expression Regulation/genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Molecular Biology/history/methods/trends ; Morpholinos/pharmacology ; Mutagenesis ; *Neurosciences/history/methods/trends ; RNA, Messenger/genetics/metabolism ; Zebrafish/*anatomy & histology ; },
abstract = {The zebrafish (Danio rerio) is one of the most promising new model organisms. The increasing popularity of this amazing small vertebrate is evident from the exponentially growing numbers of research articles, funded projects and new discoveries associated with the use of zebrafish for studying development, brain function, human diseases and screening for new drugs. Thanks to the development of novel technologies, the range of zebrafish research is constantly expanding with new tools synergistically enhancing traditional techniques. In this review we will highlight the past and present techniques which have made, and continue to make, zebrafish an attractive model organism for various fields of biology, with a specific focus on neuroscience.},
}
@article {pmid25898922,
year = {2016},
author = {Martinez-Cadenas, C and Blanco-Verea, A and Hernando, B and Busby, GB and Brion, M and Carracedo, A and Salas, A and Capelli, C},
title = {The relationship between surname frequency and Y chromosome variation in Spain.},
journal = {European journal of human genetics : EJHG},
volume = {24},
number = {1},
pages = {120-128},
doi = {10.1038/ejhg.2015.75},
pmid = {25898922},
issn = {1476-5438},
support = {//Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {*Chromosomes, Human, Y ; European Continental Ancestry Group ; Fathers/history ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Haplotypes ; History, Medieval ; Humans ; *Inheritance Patterns ; Ireland ; Male ; *Names ; Spain ; United Kingdom ; },
abstract = {In most societies, surnames are passed down from fathers to sons, just like the Y chromosome. It follows that, theoretically, men sharing the same surnames would also be expected to share related Y chromosomes. Previous investigations have explored such relationships, but so far, the only detailed studies that have been conducted are on samples from the British Isles. In order to provide additional insights into the correlation between surnames and Y chromosomes, we focused on the Spanish population by analysing Y chromosomes from 2121 male volunteers representing 37 surnames. The results suggest that the degree of coancestry within Spanish surnames is highly dependent on surname frequency, in overall agreement with British but not Irish surname studies. Furthermore, a reanalysis of comparative data for all three populations showed that Irish surnames have much greater and older surname descent clusters than Spanish and British ones, suggesting that Irish surnames may have considerably earlier origins than Spanish or British ones. Overall, despite closer geographical ties between Ireland and Britain, our analysis points to substantial similarities in surname origin and development between Britain and Spain, while possibly hinting at unique demographic or social events shaping Irish surname foundation and development.},
}
@article {pmid25898280,
year = {2015},
author = {Gonsalves, D},
title = {The wayward Hawaiian boy returns home.},
journal = {Annual review of phytopathology},
volume = {53},
number = {},
pages = {1-17},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-phyto-080614-120314},
pmid = {25898280},
issn = {1545-2107},
mesh = {Carica/*genetics/*virology ; Hawaii ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/history ; Plant Diseases/prevention & control/*virology ; Plant Pathology/*history ; Plants, Genetically Modified/genetics/virology ; United States ; },
abstract = {This chapter represents a travelog of my life and career and the philosophical points I acquired along the way. I was born on a sugar plantation on the island of Hawaii and early on had a stuttering problem. I attended the Kamehameha Schools and received my BS and MS degrees from the University of Hawaii and my Ph.D. from the University of California at Davis. I link my life and career to various principles and events, some of which are: the importance of positioning oneself; going for the big enchilada; music, the international language; the red zone of biotechnology; the human side of biotechnology; the transgenic papaya story; and my leadership time at USDA in Hawaii. The guiding light throughout my career were the words from Drs. Eduardo Trujillo and Robert Shepherd, respectively, "Dennis, don't just be a test tube scientist, do something to help people" and "Now tell me, what have you really accomplished?"},
}
@article {pmid25890787,
year = {2015},
author = {Morange, M},
title = {Monod and the spirit of molecular biology.},
journal = {Comptes rendus biologies},
volume = {338},
number = {6},
pages = {380-384},
doi = {10.1016/j.crvi.2015.03.005},
pmid = {25890787},
issn = {1768-3238},
mesh = {Allosteric Regulation ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {The founders of molecular biology shared views on the place of biology within science, as well as on the relations of molecular biology to Darwinism. Jacques Monod was no exception, but the study of his writings is particularly interesting because he expressed his point of view very clearly and pushed the implications of some of his choices further than most of his contemporaries. The spirit of molecular biology is no longer the same as in the 1960s but, interestingly, Monod anticipated some recent evolutions of this discipline.},
}
@article {pmid25877305,
year = {2015},
author = {Escaramís, G and Docampo, E and Rabionet, R},
title = {A decade of structural variants: description, history and methods to detect structural variation.},
journal = {Briefings in functional genomics},
volume = {14},
number = {5},
pages = {305-314},
doi = {10.1093/bfgp/elv014},
pmid = {25877305},
issn = {2041-2657},
mesh = {*Genome, Human ; Genomic Structural Variation/*genetics ; Genomics/*history/*methods ; High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/*methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Sequence Analysis, DNA/*methods ; },
abstract = {In the past decade, the view on genomic structural variation (SV) has been changed completely. SVs, previously considered rare events, are now recognized as the largest source of interindividual genetic variation affecting more bases than single nucleotide polymorphisms, variable number of tandem repeats and other small genetic variants. They have also been shown to play a role in phenotypic variation and in disease. In this review, the authors will provide an introduction to SV; a short historical perspective on the research of this source of genomic variation; a description of the types of structural variants, and on how they may have arisen; and an overview on methods of detecting structural variants, focusing on the analysis of high-throughput sequencing data.},
}
@article {pmid25874212,
year = {2015},
author = {Durmaz, AA and Karaca, E and Demkow, U and Toruner, G and Schoumans, J and Cogulu, O},
title = {Evolution of genetic techniques: past, present, and beyond.},
journal = {BioMed research international},
volume = {2015},
number = {},
pages = {461524},
doi = {10.1155/2015/461524},
pmid = {25874212},
issn = {2314-6141},
mesh = {Genetic Techniques/history/*trends ; Genetics/history/*trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
abstract = {Genetics is the study of heredity, which means the study of genes and factors related to all aspects of genes. The scientific history of genetics began with the works of Gregor Mendel in the mid-19th century. Prior to Mendel, genetics was primarily theoretical whilst, after Mendel, the science of genetics was broadened to include experimental genetics. Developments in all fields of genetics and genetic technology in the first half of the 20th century provided a basis for the later developments. In the second half of the 20th century, the molecular background of genetics has become more understandable. Rapid technological advancements, followed by the completion of Human Genome Project, have contributed a great deal to the knowledge of genetic factors and their impact on human life and diseases. Currently, more than 1800 disease genes have been identified, more than 2000 genetic tests have become available, and in conjunction with this at least 350 biotechnology-based products have been released onto the market. Novel technologies, particularly next generation sequencing, have dramatically accelerated the pace of biological research, while at the same time increasing expectations. In this paper, a brief summary of genetic history with short explanations of most popular genetic techniques is given.},
}
@article {pmid25873146,
year = {2015},
author = {Larmuseau, MH and Boon, N and Vanderheyden, N and Van Geystelen, A and Larmuseau, HF and Matthys, K and De Clercq, W and Decorte, R},
title = {High Y-chromosomal diversity and low relatedness between paternal lineages on a communal scale in the Western European Low Countries during the surname establishment.},
journal = {Heredity},
volume = {115},
number = {1},
pages = {3-12},
doi = {10.1038/hdy.2015.5},
pmid = {25873146},
issn = {1365-2540},
mesh = {Belgium ; Chromosomes, Human, Y/*genetics ; Europe ; *Genetic Variation ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Genotype ; History, 15th Century ; History, Medieval ; Humans ; *Names ; Pedigree ; Sequence Analysis, DNA ; },
abstract = {There is limited knowledge on the biological relatedness between citizens and on the demographical dynamics within villages, towns and cities in pre-17th century Western Europe. By combining Y-chromosomal genotypes, in-depth genealogies and surname data in a strict genetic genealogical approach, it is possible to provide insights into the genetic diversity and the relatedness between indigenous paternal lineages within a particular community at the time of the surname adoption. To obtain these insights, six Flemish communities were selected in this study based on the differences in geography and historical development. After rigorous selection of appropriate DNA donors, low relatedness between Y chromosomes of different surnames was found within each community, although there is co-occurrence of these surnames in each community since the start of the surname adoption between the 14th and 15th century. Next, the high communal diversity in Y-chromosomal lineages was comparable with the regional diversity across Flanders at that time. Moreover, clinal distributions of particular Y-chromosomal lineages between the communities were observed according to the clinal distributions earlier observed across the Flemish regions and Western Europe. No significant indication for genetic differences between communities with distinct historical development was found in the analysis. These genetic results provide relevant information for studies in historical sciences, archaeology, forensic genetics and genealogy.},
}
@article {pmid25869676,
year = {2015},
author = {Buc, H},
title = {A faith in the coherence of the living world.},
journal = {Comptes rendus biologies},
volume = {338},
number = {6},
pages = {372-379},
doi = {10.1016/j.crvi.2015.03.007},
pmid = {25869676},
issn = {1768-3238},
mesh = {Allosteric Regulation ; Enzymes/*biosynthesis ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {In this review, I compare the development of Monod's intellectual leadership in two fields, the regulation of enzyme biosynthesis and the control of enzymatic activity. I characterize the comings and goings between his scrupulous analysis of a given model system, his ability to compare the outcome with very distant experimental results, his audacity in formulating, then a physical interpretation of this convergence through a unifying mechanism. Finally, I briefly discuss how his attitude has durably impacted the whole field of molecular biology.},
}
@article {pmid25866144,
year = {2015},
author = {Scrutton, NS},
title = {Professor Richard Nelson Perham.},
journal = {The FEBS journal},
volume = {282},
number = {8},
pages = {1349-1351},
doi = {10.1111/febs.13273},
pmid = {25866144},
issn = {1742-4658},
mesh = {*Editorial Policies ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Periodicals as Topic/*history ; United Kingdom ; },
abstract = {A British molecular biologist who made groundbreaking contributions to the molecular structure, assembly and function of proteins and was Editor-in-Chief of The FEBS Journal (1998-2013).},
}
@article {pmid25857816,
year = {2015},
author = {Schwartz, M},
title = {Science and the applications of science from Louis Pasteur to Jacques Monod.},
journal = {Comptes rendus biologies},
volume = {338},
number = {6},
pages = {413-418},
doi = {10.1016/j.crvi.2015.03.006},
pmid = {25857816},
issn = {1768-3238},
mesh = {Academies and Institutes/economics/*history ; Biomedical Research/economics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Research Support as Topic/history ; },
abstract = {Jacques Monod's ideas on the applications of science came within the scope of a long tradition at the Institut Pasteur. Louis Pasteur, whose scientific career was characterized by a permanent come and go between science and its applications, long opposed the idea of getting any income from his research, until the financial needs of the Institut Pasteur made him change his mind. As for Jacques Monod, he remained a fervent supporter of basic science during his whole scientific career. However, once he became director of the Institut Pasteur, he realized that the applications of research had to be developed to support the institute from a financial point of view. Thus, he reorganized the valorization of research in the institute, through an incitation of scientists to develop projects with possible applications, and by creating a company, Institut Pasteur Production, for which he had a factory built, and which was in charge of producing and commercializing the vaccines and reagents stemming from the research at the Institut Pasteur.},
}
@article {pmid25857815,
year = {2015},
author = {de Chadarevian, S},
title = {Monod as the founder of a new discipline: local and international contexts.},
journal = {Comptes rendus biologies},
volume = {338},
number = {6},
pages = {419-423},
doi = {10.1016/j.crvi.2015.03.003},
pmid = {25857815},
issn = {1768-3238},
mesh = {Academies and Institutes/*history ; Europe ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history/organization & administration ; },
abstract = {Monod gained stature as an experimentalist and theorist as well as a discipline builder. The essay reviews the intimate connection of the intellectual and institutional projects in his career. A brief comparison with the development of the new science of molecular biology across the English Channel highlights the commonalities and specificities of the disciplinary projects in France and Britain and the role that individuals like Monod played in their formation. The article argues that there was not a single path that led to the rise of molecular biology. Rather individual initiatives and historical contingencies very much shaped local outcomes.},
}
@article {pmid25857814,
year = {2015},
author = {Merlin, F},
title = {Monod's conception of chance: its diversity and relevance today.},
journal = {Comptes rendus biologies},
volume = {338},
number = {6},
pages = {406-412},
doi = {10.1016/j.crvi.2015.03.004},
pmid = {25857814},
issn = {1768-3238},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {In his famous book Le hasard et la nécessité (1970), Monod claims that natural evolution is based on the interplay between chance and necessity bringing about adaptive evolutionary change. This article addresses a set of related questions about Monod's conception of chance: what does he mean when he uses the term "chance"? Does he invoke one or many different concepts of chance? What are the implications of his conception about the issue of the deterministic or indeterministic nature of the biological world? Is Monod's view of what chance is relevant in contemporary biology? This paper, structured by these four questions, aims at providing a synthetic study of the way Monod conceptualizes chance, particularly highlighting the metaphysical and epistemological implications of his conception and its value in biology today.},
}
@article {pmid25840726,
year = {2015},
author = {Richmond, ML},
title = {A scientist during wartime: Richard Goldschmidt's internment in the U.S.A. during the First World War.},
journal = {Endeavour},
volume = {39},
number = {1},
pages = {52-62},
doi = {10.1016/j.endeavour.2015.02.003},
pmid = {25840726},
issn = {1873-1929},
mesh = {Animals ; Concentration Camps/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Male ; Moths ; United States ; World War I ; },
}
@article {pmid25831440,
year = {2015},
author = {Ptáček, L and Jackson, S},
title = {Louis Ptáček receives the 2015 ASCI/Stanley J. Korsmeyer Award. Interview by Sarah Jackson.},
journal = {The Journal of clinical investigation},
volume = {125},
number = {4},
pages = {1369-1370},
doi = {10.1172/JCI81185},
pmid = {25831440},
issn = {1558-8238},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Biomedical Research/organization & administration ; Channelopathies/*history ; Chronobiology Disorders/*history ; Epilepsy/genetics/history/physiopathology ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; NAV1.4 Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel/deficiency/history ; Neurology/*history ; Paralysis, Hyperkalemic Periodic/genetics/history/physiopathology ; Societies, Scientific ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25828902,
year = {2015},
author = {Key, JL and Legocki, AB and Weil, JH},
title = {Dr. Leon S. Dure, III (1931-2014).},
journal = {Plant molecular biology},
volume = {88},
number = {1-2},
pages = {1-2},
doi = {10.1007/s11103-015-0306-1},
pmid = {25828902},
issn = {1573-5028},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Plants/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid25823843,
year = {2015},
author = {Wray, NR and Visscher, PM},
title = {Quantitative genetics of disease traits.},
journal = {Journal of animal breeding and genetics = Zeitschrift fur Tierzuchtung und Zuchtungsbiologie},
volume = {132},
number = {2},
pages = {198-203},
doi = {10.1111/jbg.12153},
pmid = {25823843},
issn = {1439-0388},
mesh = {Animals ; Disease/*genetics ; Genetics/history ; Genomics ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; *Quantitative Trait Loci ; },
abstract = {John James authored two key papers on the theory of risk to relatives for binary disease traits and the relationship between parameters on the observed binary scale and an unobserved scale of liability (James Annals of Human Genetics, 1971; 35: 47; Reich, James and Morris Annals of Human Genetics, 1972; 36: 163). These two papers are John James' most cited papers (198 and 328 citations, November 2014). They have been influential in human genetics and have recently gained renewed popularity because of their relevance to the estimation of quantitative genetics parameters for disease traits using SNP data. In this review, we summarize the two early papers and put them into context. We show recent extensions of the theory for ascertained case-control data and review recent applications in human genetics.},
}
@article {pmid25823834,
year = {2015},
author = {Nicholas, FW and Wade, CM and Ollivier, L and Sölkner, J},
title = {Quantitative genetics, spread of genes and genetic improvement: papers in honour of John James. Introduction.},
journal = {Journal of animal breeding and genetics = Zeitschrift fur Tierzuchtung und Zuchtungsbiologie},
volume = {132},
number = {2},
pages = {85-88},
doi = {10.1111/jbg.12158},
pmid = {25823834},
issn = {1439-0388},
mesh = {Animal Husbandry ; Animals ; Australia ; *Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid25823359,
year = {2015},
author = {Fisher, EM and Peters, J},
title = {Mary Frances Lyon (1925–2014).},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {160},
number = {4},
pages = {577-578},
pmid = {25823359},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {Animals ; Epigenomics ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Human Genome Project ; United Kingdom ; *X Chromosome Inactivation ; },
}
@article {pmid25795111,
year = {2015},
author = {DeMarini, DM and Waters, MD},
title = {The passing of Frederick J. de Serres Jr.},
journal = {Mutation research. Reviews in mutation research},
volume = {763},
number = {},
pages = {1},
doi = {10.1016/j.mrrev.2015.01.004},
pmid = {25795111},
issn = {1388-2139},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; Humans ; *Mutagenesis ; },
}
@article {pmid25791585,
year = {2015},
author = {Clerget, G and Abel, Y and Rederstorff, M},
title = {Small non-coding RNAs: a quick look in the rearview mirror.},
journal = {Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)},
volume = {1296},
number = {},
pages = {3-9},
doi = {10.1007/978-1-4939-2547-6_1},
pmid = {25791585},
issn = {1940-6029},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Models, Genetic ; RNA, Small Untranslated/*genetics/history ; },
abstract = {The revolution of miRNA discovery, in the early 2000s, shed a new light in the exciting field of small non-coding RNAs. Since then, and owing to outstanding breakthroughs in RNomic techniques, novel small non-coding RNA families have been regularly discovered, e.g., piRNAs, tiRNAs, and many others.In this review, we provide a very succinct historical and functional overview on most prominent small non-coding RNA families.},
}
@article {pmid25788723,
year = {2015},
author = {Noble, D},
title = {Conrad Waddington and the origin of epigenetics.},
journal = {The Journal of experimental biology},
volume = {218},
number = {Pt 6},
pages = {816-818},
doi = {10.1242/jeb.120071},
pmid = {25788723},
issn = {1477-9145},
mesh = {*Epigenesis, Genetic ; Epigenomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Phenotype ; },
abstract = {Denis Noble discusses Conrad Waddington's classic paper, "The genetic assimilation of the bithorax phenotype", published in Evolution in 1956.},
}
@article {pmid25779649,
year = {2015},
author = {Barlow, D},
title = {Denise Barlow: a career in epigenetics.},
journal = {RNA biology},
volume = {12},
number = {2},
pages = {105-108},
doi = {10.1080/15476286.2015.1018711},
pmid = {25779649},
issn = {1555-8584},
mesh = {Career Choice ; Epigenesis, Genetic ; Epigenomics/*history/manpower ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Imprinting/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid25778943,
year = {2015},
author = {Thiel, C},
title = {Christian Körner.},
journal = {Journal of inherited metabolic disease},
volume = {38},
number = {3},
pages = {589},
doi = {10.1007/s10545-015-9835-7},
pmid = {25778943},
issn = {1573-2665},
mesh = {Germany ; Glycomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid25761703,
year = {2015},
author = {Stenman, G},
title = {In memoriam - Joachim Mark, MD, PhD (1935-2014).},
journal = {Acta oncologica (Stockholm, Sweden)},
volume = {54},
number = {8},
pages = {1242-1243},
doi = {10.3109/0284186X.2015.1016628},
pmid = {25761703},
issn = {1651-226X},
mesh = {Cytogenetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Medical Oncology/*history ; Pathology, Clinical/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25756096,
year = {2014},
author = {},
title = {Special issue dedicated to Prof. Michael J. Dunn.},
journal = {Proteomics. Clinical applications},
volume = {8},
number = {7-8},
pages = {473-635},
pmid = {25756096},
issn = {1862-8354},
mesh = {England ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Proteomics/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid25756095,
year = {2014},
author = {},
title = {Memorial Issue Dedicated to François Jacob.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {311-398},
pmid = {25756095},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {France ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; },
}
@article {pmid25754664,
year = {2015},
author = {Kaufmann, WK},
title = {A bright quantum of time in the Cleaver Laboratory; a tribute and retrospective.},
journal = {Photochemistry and photobiology},
volume = {91},
number = {2},
pages = {501-504},
doi = {10.1111/php.12384},
pmid = {25754664},
issn = {1751-1097},
mesh = {Cell Cycle/genetics/radiation effects ; Cell Cycle Proteins/genetics/*metabolism ; DNA/genetics/*metabolism ; DNA Damage ; *DNA Repair ; DNA Repair Enzymes/genetics/*metabolism ; Epithelial Cells/*metabolism/pathology/radiation effects ; Gene Expression Regulation ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/history ; Signal Transduction ; Ultraviolet Rays ; },
}
@article {pmid25754663,
year = {2015},
author = {Mitchell, D},
title = {A tribute to the extraordinary career (1964-present) of James Edward Cleaver.},
journal = {Photochemistry and photobiology},
volume = {91},
number = {2},
pages = {450-451},
doi = {10.1111/php.12376},
pmid = {25754663},
issn = {1751-1097},
mesh = {Carcinogenesis/*genetics ; *DNA Repair ; DNA, Neoplasm/*genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Radiation, Ionizing ; United Kingdom ; },
}
@article {pmid25752167,
year = {2015},
author = {Watts, G},
title = {Mary Frances Lyon.},
journal = {Lancet (London, England)},
volume = {385},
number = {9970},
pages = {768},
doi = {10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60427-5},
pmid = {25752167},
issn = {1474-547X},
mesh = {England ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *X Chromosome Inactivation ; },
}
@article {pmid25748357,
year = {2015},
author = {Valle, D},
title = {2014 Victor A. McKusick Leadership Award.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {3},
pages = {374-376},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.02.001},
pmid = {25748357},
issn = {1537-6605},
mesh = {Awards and Prizes ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Leadership ; Societies, Scientific ; },
}
@article {pmid25748356,
year = {2015},
author = {McInnes, RR},
title = {2014 Victor A. McKusick Leadership Award introduction: David Valle.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {3},
pages = {372-373},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.01.018},
pmid = {25748356},
issn = {1537-6605},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Leadership ; Schizophrenia/genetics ; Societies, Scientific ; },
}
@article {pmid25748355,
year = {2015},
author = {Daly, MJ},
title = {2014 Curt Stern Award: A tryst with genetics.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {3},
pages = {369-371},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.12.028},
pmid = {25748355},
issn = {1537-6605},
mesh = {Awards and Prizes ; Genetics, Medical/history ; HapMap Project ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Inflammatory Bowel Diseases/*genetics ; Societies, Scientific ; },
}
@article {pmid25748354,
year = {2015},
author = {Palotie, A},
title = {2014 Curt Stern Award introduction: Mark Daly.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {3},
pages = {367-368},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.12.018},
pmid = {25748354},
issn = {1537-6605},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Societies, Medical ; },
}
@article {pmid25748353,
year = {2015},
author = {Abecasis, GR},
title = {2014 Curt Stern Award: Adventures in human genetics.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {3},
pages = {363-366},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.02.006},
pmid = {25748353},
issn = {1537-6605},
mesh = {Awards and Prizes ; Cardiovascular Diseases/genetics ; Cholesterol, LDL/blood ; Genetic Loci ; Genetics, Medical/history ; *Genome, Human ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Societies, Scientific ; },
}
@article {pmid25748352,
year = {2015},
author = {Boehnke, M},
title = {2014 Curt Stern Award introduction: Gonçalo Abecasis.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {3},
pages = {361-362},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.11.016},
pmid = {25748352},
issn = {1537-6605},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genetic Loci ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; Genotyping Techniques ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Societies, Scientific ; },
}
@article {pmid25748351,
year = {2015},
author = {Orkin, SH},
title = {2014 William Allan Award: A hematologist's pursuit of hemoglobin genetics.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {3},
pages = {354-360},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.12.007},
pmid = {25748351},
issn = {1537-6605},
mesh = {Anemia, Sickle Cell/genetics ; Awards and Prizes ; Genetic Therapy/methods ; Genetics, Medical/history ; Genome, Human ; Hemoglobins/*genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Societies, Scientific ; Thalassemia/genetics ; Transcription Factors/genetics/metabolism ; },
}
@article {pmid25748350,
year = {2015},
author = {Kazazian, HH},
title = {2014 William Allan Award introduction: Stuart Orkin.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {96},
number = {3},
pages = {352-353},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.11.018},
pmid = {25748350},
issn = {1537-6605},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Societies, Scientific ; },
}
@article {pmid25742714,
year = {2015},
author = {Casjens, SR and Hendrix, RW},
title = {Bacteriophage lambda: Early pioneer and still relevant.},
journal = {Virology},
volume = {479-480},
number = {},
pages = {310-330},
doi = {10.1016/j.virol.2015.02.010},
pmid = {25742714},
issn = {1096-0341},
support = {R01 GM047795/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; R01 GM114817/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; GM114817/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; GM47795/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Bacteriophage lambda/*genetics/*physiology ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/methods/*trends ; },
abstract = {Molecular genetic research on bacteriophage lambda carried out during its golden age from the mid-1950s to mid-1980s was critically important in the attainment of our current understanding of the sophisticated and complex mechanisms by which the expression of genes is controlled, of DNA virus assembly and of the molecular nature of lysogeny. The development of molecular cloning techniques, ironically instigated largely by phage lambda researchers, allowed many phage workers to switch their efforts to other biological systems. Nonetheless, since that time the ongoing study of lambda and its relatives has continued to give important new insights. In this review we give some relevant early history and describe recent developments in understanding the molecular biology of lambda's life cycle.},
}
@article {pmid25739302,
year = {2014},
author = {Goncharova, IuK},
title = {[Method of fixing the heterotic effect--implementation on plants (on the hundredth anniversary of the birth of V.A. Strunnikov)].},
journal = {Ontogenez},
volume = {45},
number = {6},
pages = {442-446},
pmid = {25739302},
issn = {0475-1450},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Hybrid Vigor/*physiology ; Plant Physiological Phenomena/*physiology ; Plants/*genetics ; },
abstract = {The article is devoted to the 100th anniversary of the outstanding world-renown Russian scientist Vladimir Alexandrovich Strunnikov, Academician, Professor, Head of Group of Developmental Cytology and Sex Regulation at Koltzov Institute of Developmental Biology and Head of genetic studies on silkworms in a number ofsericulture institutes in CIS. Laureate of the State Prize of the USSR (1981), Hero of Socialist Labor (1990), awarded the I.I. Mechnikov Gold Medal, Academy of Sciences of the USSR (1981), founder of the theory explaining the origin of heterosis. One of his most significant achievements is the "Methods of Fixing the Heterosis Effect," which makes it possible to abandon the production of hybrid seed and increase the yield of many crops by 20-50%. Fixing the gene complexes that determine the heterosis effect will become the "springboard" that will allow obtaining even more productive heterotic hybrids on the basis of new-generation varieties. The efficiency of this method in plant objects at the organismal and molecular levels was shown in the All-Russia Research Institute of Rice. A modification of this method reducing its laboriousness and increasing its efficiency was developed.},
}
@article {pmid25708087,
year = {2015},
author = {Lamm, E},
title = {Systems Thinking Versus Population Thinking: Genotype Integration and Chromosomal Organization 1930s-1950s.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {48},
number = {4},
pages = {641-677},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-015-9400-0},
pmid = {25708087},
issn = {1573-0387},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biological Evolution ; *Chromosome Inversion ; Chromosome Structures ; Drosophila/genetics ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Genotype ; History, 20th Century ; Hybrid Vigor ; Mutation ; },
abstract = {This article describes how empirical discoveries in the 1930s-1950s regarding population variation for chromosomal inversions affected Theodosius Dobzhansky and Richard Goldschmidt. A significant fraction of the empirical work I discuss was done by Dobzhansky and his coworkers; Goldschmidt was an astute interpreter, with strong and unusual commitments. I argue that both belong to a mechanistic tradition in genetics, concerned with the effects of chromosomal organization and systems on the inheritance patterns of species. Their different trajectories illustrate how scientists' commitments affect how they interpret new evidence and adjust to it. Dobzhansky was moved to revised views about selection, while Goldschmidt moved his attention to different genetic phenomena. However different, there are significant connections between the two that enrich our understanding of their views. I focus on two: the role of developmental considerations in Dobzhansky's thought and the role of neutrality and drift in Goldschmidt's evolutionary account. Dobzhansky's struggle with chromosomal variation is not solely about competing schools of thought within the selectionist camp, as insightfully articulated by John Beatty, but also a story of competition between selectionist thinking and developmental perspectives. In contraposition, Goldschmidt emphasized the role of low penetrance mutations that spread neutrally and pointed out that drift could result from developmental canalization. This account adds to the dominant story about Goldschmidt's resistance to the splitting of development from genetics, as told by Garland Allen and Michael Dietrich. The story I tell illustrates how developmental thinking and genetic thinking conflicted and influenced researchers with different convictions about the significance of chromosomal organization.},
}
@article {pmid25693553,
year = {2015},
author = {Matalová, A and Matalová, E},
title = {Plant genetics: Czech centre marks Mendel anniversary.},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {518},
number = {7539},
pages = {303},
doi = {10.1038/518303e},
pmid = {25693553},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; Czech Republic ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Museums ; Plants/*genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid25689367,
year = {2015},
author = {Humphery-Smith, I},
title = {The 20th anniversary of proteomics and some of its origins.},
journal = {Proteomics},
volume = {15},
number = {11},
pages = {1773-1776},
doi = {10.1002/pmic.201400582},
pmid = {25689367},
issn = {1615-9861},
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; Australia ; Bacterial Proteins/genetics/metabolism ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project ; *Mycoplasma/genetics/metabolism ; Mycoplasma capricolum/genetics ; Proteomics/*history/methods/*trends ; },
abstract = {The term "proteome" was first introduced into the scientific literature in July 1995. Almost 20 years ago attempts to characterize the "total protein complement able to be encoded by a given genome" only became possible due to privileged access to what were then the world's most complete sets of genomic data. Today, proteomics has become an important pillar in the fields of disease diagnosis and drug research and development, while also playing a critical role in the much larger field of Healthcare Analytics and Biomarker Discovery and Detection. It is important to note that this industry originated mostly from building blocks in analytical science that predated the term "proteomics" by many decades. However, proteomics, as a discipline, has allowed protein scientists to more favorably compete in the face of highly fashionable Big Science and, more specifically, genomics.},
}
@article {pmid25676246,
year = {2015},
author = {Corrales, F and Gil, C and Paradela, A},
title = {Juan Pablo Albar (1953-2014).},
journal = {Proteomics},
volume = {15},
number = {4},
pages = {625-626},
doi = {10.1002/pmic.201570034},
pmid = {25676246},
issn = {1615-9861},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Male ; Proteomics/*history ; Spain ; },
}
@article {pmid25668016,
year = {2015},
author = {Smithies, O and Coffman, T},
title = {A conversation with Oliver Smithies.},
journal = {Annual review of physiology},
volume = {77},
number = {},
pages = {1-11},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-physiol-021014-071806},
pmid = {25668016},
issn = {1545-1585},
support = {R01 HL049277/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Biomedical Research ; Embryonic Stem Cells ; Gene Targeting/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; *Nobel Prize ; Recombination, Genetic/genetics ; },
abstract = {Professor Oliver Smithies is the Weatherspoon Eminent Distinguished Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Along with Mario Capecchi and Martin Evans, Oliver was awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine in Physiology or Medicine in 2007 for his contributions to the development of gene targeting using homologous recombination in embryonic stem cells. This technique has had an immense impact on biomedical research over the past two decades. Professor Smithies has had a long and distinguished career as a researcher and mentor. Here, he provides an entertaining and enlightening discussion of his life in science.},
}
@article {pmid25667980,
year = {2015},
author = {, },
title = {International Journal of Molecular Science 2015's Best Paper Award.},
journal = {International journal of molecular sciences},
volume = {16},
number = {2},
pages = {3700-3704},
doi = {10.3390/ijms16023700},
pmid = {25667980},
issn = {1422-0067},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Periodicals as Topic ; Publishing/*standards ; Research ; },
}
@article {pmid25652989,
year = {2015},
author = {Rastan, S},
title = {Mary F. Lyon (1925-2014).},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {518},
number = {7537},
pages = {36},
doi = {10.1038/518036a},
pmid = {25652989},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {Animals ; Chromosomes, Mammalian/genetics ; Female ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Male ; Mice ; RNA, Long Noncoding/genetics ; Terminology as Topic ; United Kingdom ; X Chromosome Inactivation/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid25646295,
year = {2015},
author = {Joe, B},
title = {Dr Lewis Kitchener Dahl, the Dahl rats, and the "inconvenient truth" about the genetics of hypertension.},
journal = {Hypertension (Dallas, Tex. : 1979)},
volume = {65},
number = {5},
pages = {963-969},
doi = {10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.114.04368},
pmid = {25646295},
issn = {1524-4563},
support = {R01 HL076709/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States ; R01 HL112641/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States ; HL076709/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States ; R01 HL020176/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States ; HL112641/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States ; R37 HL020176/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States ; HL020176/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; Biomedical Research/history ; *Disease Models, Animal ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Hypertension/genetics/*history ; Rats ; *Rats, Inbred Dahl ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25636689,
year = {2015},
author = {Nicoglou, A},
title = {The evolution of phenotypic plasticity: genealogy of a debate in genetics.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {50},
number = {},
pages = {67-76},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2015.01.003},
pmid = {25636689},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Adaptation, Physiological ; Biological Evolution ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; *Phenotype ; Plant Breeding/*history ; Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {The paper describes the context and the origin of a particular debate that concerns the evolution of phenotypic plasticity. In 1965, British biologist A. D. Bradshaw proposed a widely cited model intended to explain the evolution of norms of reaction, based on his studies of plant populations. Bradshaw's model went beyond the notion of the "adaptive norm of reaction" discussed before him by Dobzhansky and Schmalhausen by suggesting that "plasticity"--the ability of a phenotype to be modified by the environment--should be genetically determined. To prove Bradshaw's hypothesis, it became necessary for some authors to identify the pressures exerted by natural selection on phenotypic plasticity in particular traits, and thus to model its evolution. In this paper, I contrast two different views, based on quantitative genetic models, proposed in the mid-1980s: Russell Lande and Sara Via's conception of phenotypic plasticity, which assumes that the evolution of plasticity is linked to the evolution of the plastic trait itself, and Samuel Scheiner and Richard Lyman's view, which assumes that the evolution of plasticity is independent from the evolution of the trait. I show how the origin of this specific debate, and different assumptions about the evolution of phenotypic plasticity, depended on Bradshaw's definition of plasticity and the context of quantitative genetics.},
}
@article {pmid25636171,
year = {2015},
author = {Koornneef, M},
title = {Interview with Maarten Koornneef.},
journal = {Trends in plant science},
volume = {20},
number = {3},
pages = {135-136},
doi = {10.1016/j.tplants.2015.01.002},
pmid = {25636171},
issn = {1878-4372},
mesh = {Arabidopsis/*genetics ; Germany ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Lycopersicon esculentum/*genetics ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Netherlands ; Switzerland ; },
}
@article {pmid25632639,
year = {2014},
author = {Nau, JY},
title = {[The sad (but somewhat reassuring) excesses of James Watson, Nobel prize recipient 1962].},
journal = {Revue medicale suisse},
volume = {10},
number = {454},
pages = {2390-2391},
pmid = {25632639},
issn = {1660-9379},
mesh = {*Famous Persons ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Nobel Prize ; Personality ; Racism ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25630685,
year = {2015},
author = {},
title = {Obituary.},
journal = {Birth defects research. Part A, Clinical and molecular teratology},
volume = {103},
number = {1},
pages = {64-65},
doi = {10.1002/bdra.23359},
pmid = {25630685},
issn = {1542-0760},
mesh = {Genetic Counseling/*history ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Teratology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid25626849,
year = {2015},
author = {Hirabayashi, Y},
title = {Memorial address to Dr Tohru Inoue.},
journal = {Journal of applied toxicology : JAT},
volume = {35},
number = {3},
pages = {229},
doi = {10.1002/jat.3101},
pmid = {25626849},
issn = {1099-1263},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Japan ; Molecular Biology/*history/organization & administration ; Stem Cell Research/history ; Toxicology/*history/organization & administration ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25621339,
year = {2014},
author = {Kyriacou, CP},
title = {Alexandre Afranio Peixoto (1963-2013).},
journal = {Infection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases},
volume = {28},
number = {},
pages = {757-758},
pmid = {25621339},
issn = {1567-7257},
mesh = {Brazil ; *Entomology/history ; *Famous Persons ; *Genetics, Population/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid25606720,
year = {2014},
author = {Calvo-González, E},
title = {On slaves and genes: "origins" and "processes" in genetic studies of the Brazilian population.},
journal = {Historia, ciencias, saude--Manguinhos},
volume = {21},
number = {4},
pages = {1113-1129},
doi = {10.1590/S0104-59702014000400003},
pmid = {25606720},
issn = {1678-4758},
mesh = {Brazil ; *Genetic Research ; Genetics/history ; *Genetics, Population ; Haplotypes ; Hemoglobin, Sickle/*genetics ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Knowledge ; *Slavery/ethnology ; Social Sciences ; },
abstract = {In this article I examine how contemporary geneticists investigating the history and configuration of the Brazilian population engage with other academic disciplines. To do so I use as a case study some articles published by geneticists researching the presence of hemoglobin S variants in Brazil, in which there is a clear pretension to contribute to the analysis of issues such as slavery or Brazil's ethnic identity. By contrasting these studies with contemporary works from history and the social science, the explanatory centrality of "origin" in the genetic studies analyzed is problematized, as is the lack of interaction with the epistemological characteristics of other areas of knowledge.},
}
@article {pmid25599818,
year = {2015},
author = {Ragsdale, CS and Edgar, HJ},
title = {Cultural interaction and biological distance in postclassic period Mexico.},
journal = {American journal of physical anthropology},
volume = {157},
number = {1},
pages = {121-133},
doi = {10.1002/ajpa.22701},
pmid = {25599818},
issn = {1096-8644},
mesh = {Anthropology ; Commerce/*history ; Culture ; Female ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 15th Century ; History, 16th Century ; History, Medieval ; Human Migration/*history ; Humans ; Indians, Central American/*history ; Male ; Mexico/ethnology ; Population Dynamics ; },
abstract = {Economic, political, and cultural relationships connected virtually every population throughout Mexico during Postclassic period (AD 900-1520). Much of what is known about population interaction in prehistoric Mexico is based on archaeological or ethnohistoric data. What is unclear, especially for the Postclassic period, is how these data correlate with biological population structure. We address this by assessing biological (phenotypic) distances among 28 samples based upon a comparison of dental morphology trait frequencies, which serve as a proxy for genetic variation, from 810 individuals. These distances were compared with models representing geographic and cultural relationships among the same groups. Results of Mantel and partial Mantel matrix correlation tests show that shared migration and trade are correlated with biological distances, but geographic distance is not. Trade and political interaction are also correlated with biological distance when combined in a single matrix. These results indicate that trade and political relationships affected population structure among Postclassic Mexican populations. We suggest that trade likely played a major role in shaping patterns of interaction between populations. This study also shows that the biological distance data support the migration histories described in ethnohistoric sources.},
}
@article {pmid25588299,
year = {2014},
author = {Saura, A},
title = {A tale of two papers.},
journal = {Hereditas},
volume = {151},
number = {6},
pages = {119-122},
doi = {10.1111/hrd2.00073},
pmid = {25588299},
issn = {1601-5223},
mesh = {Continental Population Groups/genetics/*history ; Eugenics ; Genetics, Population/history ; *Genome, Human ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Periodicals as Topic/*history ; },
abstract = {Two papers published in HEREDITAS between 1921 and 1939 show how the attitude towards race biology changed in the course of the interwar period in the Nordic countries. In the early 1920s race biology was seen to constitute a legitimate science. Ordinary human genetics prevailed, however, over race biology already in the very beginning on the pages of HEREDITAS. Population thinking was introduced into the study of human heredity around the year 1930. It effectively contradicted the concept of the race. Interestingly, HEREDITAS does not carry a single paper on eugenics and sterilization. In 1939 we see a final repudiation of the doctrines on race. Times had changed and the National Socialists had usurped the doctrines of race in Germany.},
}
@article {pmid25586838,
year = {2015},
author = {Kirk, EP},
title = {An explosion, a tsunami, a runaway train: half a century of genetics.},
journal = {Journal of paediatrics and child health},
volume = {51},
number = {1},
pages = {3-7},
doi = {10.1111/jpc.12799},
pmid = {25586838},
issn = {1440-1754},
mesh = {Australia ; Europe ; Genetics/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/history ; Humans ; Periodicals as Topic/history ; United States ; },
abstract = {Let's face it. There is no way of writing about the last half century of genetics without getting a little bit excitable. All of the terms in the title of this piece have been used by otherwise level-headed geneticists to describe the pace of change in genetics over the past few years. The thing is--they are right. Genetics is moving faster and faster. Five years ago, few people would have predicted that we would be where we are today. Five years from now, presumably, it will seem like 2015 was some kind of Dark Age when nothing much was happening. So it would be easy to lose perspective on the achievements of the past, or to assume that nothing much was happening in genetics until recently. However, everything that is happening in genetics now rests on the foundations built up over the past century, and particularly the past half century. And through that time, this journal has been a part of that story.},
}
@article {pmid25580492,
year = {2014},
author = {Dessen, P and Larsen, CJ and Valent, A and Couturier, J},
title = {[Homage to Alain Bernheim].},
journal = {Bulletin du cancer},
volume = {101},
number = {10},
pages = {906-907},
pmid = {25580492},
issn = {1769-6917},
mesh = {Cytogenetics/*history ; France ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid25574534,
year = {2014},
author = {Suárez-Díaz, E},
title = {The long and winding road of molecular data in phylogenetic analysis.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {47},
number = {3},
pages = {443-478},
pmid = {25574534},
issn = {0022-5010},
mesh = {Classification/*methods ; *Evolution, Molecular ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; *Phylogeny ; },
abstract = {The use of molecules and reactions as evidence, markers and/or traits for evolutionary processes has a history more than a century long. Molecules have been used in studies of intra-specific variation and studies of similarity among species that do not necessarily result in the analysis of phylogenetic relations. Promoters of the use of molecular data have sustained the need for quantification as the main argument to make use of them. Moreover, quantification has allowed intensive statistical analysis, as a condition and a product of increasing automation. All of these analyses are subject to the methodological anxiety characteristic of a community in search of objectivity (Suárez-Díaz and Anaya-Munoz, Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci 39:451–458, 2008). It is in this context that scientists compared and evaluated protein and nucleic acid sequence data with other types of molecular data – including immunological, electrophoretic and hybridization data. This paper argues that by looking at longterm historical processes, such as the use of molecular evidence in evolutionary biology, we gain valuable insights into the history of science. In that sense, it accompanies a growing concern among historians for big-pictures of science that incorporate the fruitful historical research on local cases of the last decades.},
}
@article {pmid25571752,
year = {2014},
author = {Vorms, M},
title = {The birth of classical genetics as the junction of two disciplines: conceptual change as representational change.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of science},
volume = {48},
number = {},
pages = {105-116},
pmid = {25571752},
issn = {0039-3681},
mesh = {Cell Biology/*history ; Chromosome Mapping/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; *Interdisciplinary Communication ; Models, Genetic ; },
abstract = {The birth of classical genetics in the 1910's was the result of the junction of two modes of analysis, corresponding to two disciplines: Mendelism and cytology. The goal of this paper is to shed some light on the change undergone by the science of heredity at the time, and to emphasize the subtlety of the conceptual articulation of Mendelian and cytological hypotheses within classical genetics. As a way to contribute to understanding how the junction of the two disciplines at play gave birth to a new way of studying heredity, my focus will be on the forms of representation used in genetics research at the time. More particularly, I will study the design and development, by Thomas H. Morgan's group, of the technique of linkage mapping, which embodies the integration of the Mendelian and cytological forms of representation. I will show that the design of this technique resulted in a genuine conceptual change, which should be described as a representational change, rather than merely as the introduction of new hypotheses into genetics.},
}
@article {pmid25564667,
year = {2015},
author = {Viegas, J},
title = {Profile of Brian Charlesworth.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {112},
number = {6},
pages = {1652-1653},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1423862112},
pmid = {25564667},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; Career Choice ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Sex ; },
}
@article {pmid25564560,
year = {2015},
author = {Siminovitch, L and Worton, R},
title = {A tribute to Margaret W. Thompson.},
journal = {Journal of medical genetics},
volume = {52},
number = {5},
pages = {360},
doi = {10.1136/jmedgenet-2014-102941},
pmid = {25564560},
issn = {1468-6244},
mesh = {Canada ; *Famous Persons ; *Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid25562986,
year = {2014},
author = {Nau, JY},
title = {[Lomidine and trisomy 21: stunning awakening of two forgotten scandals].},
journal = {Revue medicale suisse},
volume = {10},
number = {452},
pages = {2294-2295},
pmid = {25562986},
issn = {1660-9379},
mesh = {Africa ; Antiprotozoal Agents/*adverse effects/history ; Colonialism/history ; Down Syndrome/genetics/*history ; Ethics, Medical ; Ethics, Research ; France ; Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Internationality/history ; Pentamidine/*adverse effects/history ; },
}
@article {pmid25556180,
year = {2015},
author = {Grunstein, M and Bird, A},
title = {Max Birnstiel 1933-2014: Gene pioneer.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {112},
number = {2},
pages = {302-303},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1423755112},
pmid = {25556180},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Europe ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid25549891,
year = {2015},
author = {Verdin, E and Ott, M},
title = {50 years of protein acetylation: from gene regulation to epigenetics, metabolism and beyond.},
journal = {Nature reviews. Molecular cell biology},
volume = {16},
number = {4},
pages = {258-264},
doi = {10.1038/nrm3931},
pmid = {25549891},
issn = {1471-0080},
support = {P30 AI027763/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; R24 DK085610/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Acetylation ; *Epigenesis, Genetic ; *Gene Expression Regulation ; Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Models, Biological ; Proteins/*metabolism ; },
abstract = {In 1964, Vincent Allfrey and colleagues reported the identification of histone acetylation and with deep insight proposed a regulatory role for this protein modification in transcription regulation. Subsequently, histone acetyltransferases (HATs), histone deacetylases (HDACs) and acetyl-Lys-binding proteins were identified as transcription regulators, thereby providing compelling evidence for his daring hypothesis. During the past 15 years, reversible protein acetylation and its modifying enzymes have been implicated in many cellular functions beyond transcription regulation. Here, we review the progress accomplished during the past 50 years and discuss the future of protein acetylation.},
}
@article {pmid27348995,
year = {2015},
author = {Giorgianni, F and Provenza, A},
title = {[AN ENTRY FOR A "DICTIONARY OF GENETICS" GENERATION AND ASPECTS OF HEREDITY FROM THE PRESOCRATICS TO GALEN: THE MAIN NOTIONS AND THE TECHNICAL TERMINOLOGY].},
journal = {Medicina nei secoli},
volume = {27},
number = {3},
pages = {1111-1157},
pmid = {27348995},
issn = {0394-9001},
mesh = {Female ; Genetics/*history ; Greek World ; *Heredity ; History, Ancient ; Humans ; Male ; *Reproduction ; },
abstract = {This article aims at dealing with the historical development and the terminology of the notion of generation in ancient Greece, taking as well into consideration several aspects of the notion of heredity, for, at present, research in this field lacks a consistent encyclopedic entry on such subjects. The Presocratic - mainly Empedoclean - notions of 'mixing' and 'separation' lurk behind the Hippocratic treatise De genitura/De natura pueri, in which the process of generation is explained through the 'mixing' mechanism of a female semen and a male one. Semen comes from each part of both parents, so it is sound from the sound parts, and unhealthy from the unhealthy parts. It is considered as the "foam of blood" (Diogenes, A 24 DK), gathering itself into a web of blood vessels that bring it to the genital organs. The mixed semen keeps on fixing itself in the womb thanks to pneuma ('breath'), until the embryo takes human shape. Generation is influenced by both the environment (Airs, Waters, Places) and dietetics (On Regimen, I). Male and female are on different levels in CH, since the former is characterized as hot and strong, and the latter is considered as cold and weak; as a consequence of this, the articulation takes longer in the case of a female embryo. On the other hand, the pangenesis and the preformism theory claim for a strong mutual relationship. Sex determination depends from the 'prevalence' of the male or female semen. The generation of twins of different sex depends from such 'prevalence', as well as from the conformation of the womb and its places (right/male, left/female). Both nature (physis) and use (nomos) have a role in the mechanism of inheritance, as the case of the Macrocephalians in Airs Waters Places shows. On the other hand, Plato's Timaeus exemplifies the theory according to which semen derives from the spinal marrow. The structures of the body - bones, flesh, nerves - aim at protecting marrow itself for the sake of maintaining the continuity of the process of generation. For Aristotle, the female provides a specific contribution to generation, that is menstrual blood, the 'material' that will be fashioned into shape by the 'principle of movement' provided in the male semen. Menstrual blood and semen share the same nature, for they are both the ultimate secretion of nutriment, that is the residue of concocted blood. Considering the female as colder that the male, Aristotle develops the concept of the female as privation in relation to the male. The notion of 'prevalence' in its turn provides explanation for similarities between parents and children. The theory of a double semen originating itself in blood comes back again in Galen's treatise On semen, which links together the Hippocratic notion of a bi-sexual semen and the Aristotelian one of a specific female contribution, the menstrual blood, that provides nutrition for the embryo. Furthermore, similarities between sons and mothers are considered in Definitiones medicae as the main proof of the existence of a female semen. Actually the Alexandrian physicians - Herophilus for instance - considered the female sexual organs anatomy as perfectly corresponding to the male one. As a consequence of the synthesis between the Hippocratic and the Aristotelian tradition, Galen's embryological doctrines were very long-lasting in medical thought.},
}
@article {pmid25548947,
year = {2014},
author = {Weatherall, DJ},
title = {A journey in science: early lessons from the hemoglobin field.},
journal = {Molecular medicine (Cambridge, Mass.)},
volume = {20},
number = {},
pages = {478-485},
doi = {10.2119/molmed.2014.00093},
pmid = {25548947},
issn = {1528-3658},
support = {//Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom ; MC_UU_12009/13//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; //Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Hematologic Diseases/*genetics ; Hemoglobins/*physiology ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Medicine/*history ; Translational Medical Research/trends ; },
abstract = {Real innovations in medicine and science are historic and singular; the stories behind each occurrence are precious. At Molecular Medicine we have established the Anthony Cerami Award in Translational Medicine to document and preserve these histories. The monographs recount the seminal events as told in the voice of the original investigators who provided the crucial early insight. These essays capture the essence of discovery, chronicling the birth of ideas that created new fields of research; and launched trajectories that persisted and ultimately influenced how disease is prevented, diagnosed, and treated. In this volume, the Cerami Award Monograph is by David J Weatherall, Founder, Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, Oxford University, John Radcliffe Hospital. A visionary in the field of hemoglobin, this is the story of Professor Weatherall's scientific journey.},
}
@article {pmid25547001,
year = {2014},
author = {Zallen, DT},
title = {The power of partnerships: the Liverpool school of butterfly and medical genetics.},
journal = {British journal for the history of science},
volume = {47},
number = {175 Pt 4},
pages = {677-699},
pmid = {25547001},
issn = {0007-0874},
mesh = {Animals ; Butterflies/*genetics ; England ; Genetics/*history ; Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; },
abstract = {From the 1950s to the 1970s, a group of physician-researchers forming the 'Liverpool school' made groundbreaking contributions in such diverse areas as the genetics of Lepidoptera and human medical genetics. The success of this group can be attributed to the several different, but interconnected, research partnerships that Liverpool physician Cyril Clarke established with Philip Sheppard, Victor McKusick at Johns Hopkins University, the Nuffield Foundation, and his wife FCo. Despite its notable successes, among them the discovery of the method to prevent Rhesus haemolytic disease of the newborn, the Liverpool School began to lose prominence in the mid-1970s, just as the field of medical genetics that it had helped pioneer began to grow. This paper explores the role of partnerships in making possible the Liverpool school's scientific and medical achievements, and also in contributing to its decline.},
}
@article {pmid25544980,
year = {2014},
author = {Suzuki, A},
title = {Obituary: Dr. Yoshitaka Nagai (1931–2014).},
journal = {Glycoconjugate journal},
volume = {31},
number = {8},
pages = {547-548},
pmid = {25544980},
issn = {1573-4986},
mesh = {Animals ; Glycomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Japan ; },
}
@article {pmid25544979,
year = {2014},
author = {Kawasaki, T},
title = {Obituary: An appreciation of Gilbert G. Ashwell — A pioneer of glycobiology.},
journal = {Glycoconjugate journal},
volume = {31},
number = {8},
pages = {545-546},
pmid = {25544979},
issn = {1573-4986},
mesh = {Animals ; Glycomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Rabbits ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25543071,
year = {2015},
author = {Mason, PH and Domínguez D, JF and Winter, B and Grignolio, A},
title = {Hidden in plain view: degeneracy in complex systems.},
journal = {Bio Systems},
volume = {128},
number = {},
pages = {1-8},
doi = {10.1016/j.biosystems.2014.12.003},
pmid = {25543071},
issn = {1872-8324},
mesh = {Allergy and Immunology/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Models, Theoretical ; *Physical Phenomena ; Terminology as Topic ; },
abstract = {Degeneracy is a word with two meanings. The popular usage of the word denotes deviance and decay. In scientific discourse, degeneracy refers to the idea that different pathways can lead to the same output. In the biological sciences, the concept of degeneracy has been ignored for a few key reasons. Firstly, the word "degenerate" in popular culture has negative, emotionally powerful associations that do not inspire scientists to consider its technical meaning. Secondly, the tendency of searching for single causes of natural and social phenomena means that scientists can overlook the multi-stranded relationships between cause and effect. Thirdly, degeneracy and redundancy are often confused with each other. Degeneracy refers to dissimilar structures that are functionally similar while redundancy refers to identical structures. Degeneracy can give rise to novelty in ways that redundancy cannot. From genetic codes to immunology, vaccinology and brain development, degeneracy is a crucial part of how complex systems maintain their functional integrity. This review article discusses how the scientific concept of degeneracy was imported into genetics from physics and was later introduced to immunology and neuroscience. Using examples of degeneracy in immunology, neuroscience and linguistics, we demonstrate that degeneracy is a useful way of understanding how complex systems function. Reviewing the history and theoretical scope of degeneracy allows its usefulness to be better appreciated, its coherency to be further developed, and its application to be more quickly realized.},
}
@article {pmid25527615,
year = {2015},
author = {Kumar, S},
title = {MBE citation classics (2015 edition).},
journal = {Molecular biology and evolution},
volume = {32},
number = {1},
pages = {1-3},
doi = {10.1093/molbev/msu339},
pmid = {25527615},
issn = {1537-1719},
mesh = {Bibliometrics ; *Biological Evolution ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Molecular Biology/history ; Periodicals as Topic/*statistics & numerical data ; },
}
@article {pmid25522149,
year = {2014},
author = {Arber, W and Gitschier, J},
title = {The inventiveness of nature: an interview with Werner Arber.},
journal = {PLoS genetics},
volume = {10},
number = {12},
pages = {e1004879},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pgen.1004879},
pmid = {25522149},
issn = {1553-7404},
mesh = {Bacteriophage lambda/physiology ; Escherichia coli/genetics/virology ; Evolution, Molecular ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Switzerland ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25521096,
year = {2014},
author = {Chisholm, AD},
title = {Deep reads: strands in the history of molecular genetics.},
journal = {PLoS genetics},
volume = {10},
number = {12},
pages = {e1004887},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pgen.1004887},
pmid = {25521096},
issn = {1553-7404},
mesh = {Animals ; Evolution, Molecular ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid25515361,
year = {2014},
author = {Sarkar, S},
title = {Lederberg on bacterial recombination, Haldane, and cold war genetics: an interview.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {36},
number = {2},
pages = {280-288},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-014-0029-7},
pmid = {25515361},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Biology/*history ; Genome, Bacterial/*genetics ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; India ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Recombination, Genetic/*genetics ; United States ; },
abstract = {Joshua Lederberg (1925-2008), was one of the pioneers of molecular genetics perhaps best known for his discovery of genetic recombination in bacteria which earned him a Nobel Prize in 1958 (shared with George Beadle and Edward Tatum). Lederberg's interests were broad including the origin of life, exobiology (a term that he coined) and emerging diseases and artificial intelligence in his, later years. This article contains the transcription of an interview in excerpts, docu- menting the interactions between Lederberg and fellow biologist J.B.S. Haldane wlich lasted from 1946 until Haldane's death in Kolkata (then Calcutta) in 1964.},
}
@article {pmid25515360,
year = {2014},
author = {Talcott, S},
title = {Errant life, molecular biology, and biopower: Canguilhem, Jacob, and Foucault.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {36},
number = {2},
pages = {254-279},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-014-0023-0},
pmid = {25515360},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Biology/*history ; France ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Philosophy/*history ; *Power (Psychology) ; Science/*history ; },
abstract = {This paper considers the theoretical circumstances that urged Michel Foucault to analyse modern societies in terms of biopower. Georges Canguilhem's account of the relations between science and the living forms an essential starting point for Foucault's own later explorations, though the challenges posed by the molecular revolution in biology and François Jacob's history of it allowed Foucault to extend and transform Canguilhem's philosophy of error. Using archival research into his 1955-1956 course on "Science and Error," I show that, for Canguilhem, it is inauthentic to treat a living being as an error, even if living things are capable of making errors in the domain of knowledge. The emergent molecular biology in the 1960s posed a grave challenge, however, since it suggested that individuals could indeed be errors of genetic reproduction. The paper discusses how Canguilhem and Foucault each responded to this by examining, among other texts, their respective reviews of Jacob's The Logic of the Living. For Canguilhem this was an opportunity to reaffirm the creativity of life in the living individual, which is not a thing to be evaluated, but the source of values. For Foucault, drawing on Jacob's work, this was the opportunity to develop a transformed account of valuation by posing biopower as the DNA of society. Despite their disagreements, the paper examines these three authors as different iterations of a historical epistemology attuned to errancy, error, and experimentation.},
}
@article {pmid25515357,
year = {2014},
author = {Teicher, A},
title = {Mendel's use of mathematical modelling: ratios, predictions and the appeal to tradition.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {36},
number = {2},
pages = {187-208},
doi = {10.1007/s40656-014-0019-9},
pmid = {25515357},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {*Chimera ; Genetics/*history ; Germany ; History, 19th Century ; *Models, Theoretical ; },
abstract = {The seventh section of Gregor Mendel's famous 1866 paper contained a peculiar mathematical model, which predicted the expected ratios between the number of constant and hybrid types, assuming self-pollination continued throughout further generations. This model was significant for Mendel's argumentation and was perceived as inseparable from his entire theory at the time. A close examination of this model reveals that it has several perplexing aspects which have not yet been systematically scrutinized. The paper analyzes those aspects, dispels some common misconceptions regarding the interpretation of the model, and re-evaluates the role of this model for Mendel himself. In light of the resulting analysis, Mendel's position between nineteenth-century hybridist tradition and twentieth-century population genetics is reassessed, and his sophisticated use of mathematics to legitimize his innovative theory is uncovered.},
}
@article {pmid25494302,
year = {2015},
author = {Harrison, SC},
title = {Veritas per structuram.},
journal = {Annual review of biochemistry},
volume = {84},
number = {},
pages = {37-60},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-biochem-060614-033857},
pmid = {25494302},
issn = {1545-4509},
mesh = {Biochemistry/*history ; Crystallography, X-Ray ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Tombusvirus/*chemistry ; United States ; },
abstract = {When I entered graduate school in 1963, the golden age of molecular biology had just begun, and myoglobin was the only protein with a known high-resolution structure. The romance of working out the structure of a virus by X-ray crystallography nonetheless captured both my imagination and the ensuing 15 years of my scientific life, during which "protein crystallography" began to morph into "structural biology." The course of the research recounted here follows the broader, 50-year trajectory of structural biology, as I could rarely resist opportunities to capitalize on new technologies when they opened some interesting part of biology to three-dimensional rigor. That fascination shows no sign of subsiding.},
}
@article {pmid25491746,
year = {2014},
author = {Höglund, M and Bengtsson, BO},
title = {The origin of the Mendelian Society in Lund and the start of Hereditas.},
journal = {Hereditas},
volume = {151},
number = {6},
pages = {110-114},
doi = {10.1111/hrd2.00078},
pmid = {25491746},
issn = {1601-5223},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Periodicals as Topic/history ; Societies, Scientific/*history ; Sweden ; },
abstract = {The Mendelian Society in Lund was founded in 1910. The initiative came from two young biologists supported by a wide circle of interested plant breeders and academics. Already from the start the society was dominated by the towering personality Herman Nilsson-Ehle. After two active years, the Society went into temporal hibernation until it resumed its activities in spring 1916, when Nilsson-Ehle was on his way to become Sweden's first professor of genetics. One of the aims of the Society was to launch a scientific journal for local scientists directed at an international audience. After a successful fundraising campaign, Hereditas was started in 1920. One of the original instigators of the Mendelian Society, Robert Larsson, became its first editor, and he remained in this position for more than 30 years. Both he and Nilsson-Ehle were fascinating personalities, deeply rooted in their time's scientific and ideological debates.},
}
@article {pmid25491643,
year = {2014},
author = {Lundqvist, U},
title = {Scandinavian mutation research in barley - a historical review.},
journal = {Hereditas},
volume = {151},
number = {6},
pages = {123-131},
doi = {10.1111/hrd2.00077},
pmid = {25491643},
issn = {1601-5223},
mesh = {Breeding/history ; Chromosome Mapping ; DNA, Plant/genetics ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Hordeum/*genetics ; Mutagenesis ; Mutation ; Sweden ; },
abstract = {In 1928, the Swedish geneticists Hermann Nilsson-Ehle and Åke Gustafsson started on their suggestion experiments with induced mutations using the barley crop. In 1953, at the instigation of the Swedish Government, the 'Group for Theoretical and Applied Mutation Research' was established. Its aim was to study basic research problems in order to influence and improve methods for breeding cultivated plants. The research was non-commercial, even if some mutants were of practical importance. The peaks of activities occurred during the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. Applying X-rays and UV-irradiation very soon the first chlorophyll mutations were obtained followed by the first viable mutations 'Erectoides'. Soon the X-ray experiments expanded with other types of irradiation such as neutrons etc. and finally with chemical mutagens, starting with mustard gas and concluding with the sodium azide. The research brought a wealth of observations of general biological importance, high increased mutation frequencies, difference in the mutation spectrum and to direct mutagenesis for specific genes. A rather large collection of morphological and physiological mutations, about 12 000 different mutant alleles, with a very broad variation were collected and incorporated into the Nordic Genetic Resource Center (NordGen) Sweden. Barley, the main experimental crop has become one of the few higher plants in which biochemical genetics and molecular biological studies are now feasible. The collection is an outstanding material for mapping genes and investigating the barley genome. Several characters have been studied and analyzed in more detail and are presented in this historical review.},
}
@article {pmid25491531,
year = {2014},
author = {Heneen, WK},
title = {Kinetochore structure and chromosome orientation: a tribute to Gunnar Östergren.},
journal = {Hereditas},
volume = {151},
number = {6},
pages = {115-118},
doi = {10.1111/hrd2.00076},
pmid = {25491531},
issn = {1601-5223},
mesh = {*Chromosome Segregation ; Chromosomes/*physiology ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Kinetochores/*physiology ; Meiosis ; Mitosis ; Sweden ; },
}
@article {pmid25483343,
year = {2015},
author = {Hamilton, SP},
title = {The promise of psychiatric pharmacogenomics.},
journal = {Biological psychiatry},
volume = {77},
number = {1},
pages = {29-35},
doi = {10.1016/j.biopsych.2014.09.009},
pmid = {25483343},
issn = {1873-2402},
mesh = {Genetic Variation ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mental Disorders/*drug therapy/*genetics ; Pharmacogenetics/history/*trends ; Precision Medicine ; Psychotropic Drugs/adverse effects/*therapeutic use ; Treatment Outcome ; },
abstract = {Clinicians already face "personalized" medicine every day while experiencing the great variation in toxicities and drug efficacy among individual patients. Pharmacogenetics studies are the platform for discovering the DNA determinants of variability in drug response and tolerability. Research now focuses on the genome after its beginning with analyses of single genes. Therapeutic outcomes from several psychotropic drugs have been weakly linked to specific genetic variants without independent replication. Drug side effects show stronger associations to genetic variants, including human leukocyte antigen loci with carbamazepine-induced dermatologic outcome and MC4R with atypical antipsychotic weight gain. Clinical implementation has proven challenging, with barriers including a lack of replicable prospective evidence for clinical utility required for altering medical care. More recent studies show promising approaches for reducing these barriers to routine incorporation of pharmacogenetics data into clinical care.},
}
@article {pmid25480947,
year = {2014},
author = {Grossbach, U},
title = {In memoriam Jan-Erik Edström (1931-2013).},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {198},
number = {4},
pages = {1769-1770},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.114.171587},
pmid = {25480947},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Famous Persons ; History, 20th Century ; *Molecular Biology/history ; },
}
@article {pmid25475529,
year = {2015},
author = {Harris, JR},
title = {Transmission electron microscopy in molecular structural biology: A historical survey.},
journal = {Archives of biochemistry and biophysics},
volume = {581},
number = {},
pages = {3-18},
doi = {10.1016/j.abb.2014.11.011},
pmid = {25475529},
issn = {1096-0384},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Microscopy, Electron, Transmission/*history/*methods ; Molecular Biology/*history/*methods ; },
abstract = {In this personal, historic account of macromolecular transmission electron microscopy (TEM), published data from the 1940s through to recent times is surveyed, within the context of the remarkable progress that has been achieved during this time period. The evolution of present day molecular structural biology is described in relation to the associated biological disciplines. The contribution of numerous electron microscope pioneers to the development of the subject is discussed. The principal techniques for TEM specimen preparation, thin sectioning, metal shadowing, negative staining and plunge-freezing (vitrification) of thin aqueous samples are described, with a selection of published images to emphasise the virtues of each method. The development of digital image analysis and 3D reconstruction is described in detail as applied to electron crystallography and reconstructions from helical structures, 2D membrane crystals as well as single particle 3D reconstruction of icosahedral viruses and macromolecules. The on-going development of new software, algorithms and approaches is highlighted before specific examples of the historical progress of the structural biology of proteins and viruses are presented.},
}
@article {pmid25466978,
year = {2015},
author = {Dixon, RA},
title = {Interview with Richard A. Dixon.},
journal = {Trends in plant science},
volume = {20},
number = {1},
pages = {1-2},
doi = {10.1016/j.tplants.2014.10.009},
pmid = {25466978},
issn = {1878-4372},
mesh = {Biochemistry/*history ; Biofuels/analysis ; Crops, Agricultural/genetics ; England ; Genetic Engineering/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/history ; Oklahoma ; Plants/*chemistry/*genetics ; Texas ; },
}
@article {pmid25455542,
year = {2014},
author = {Amundson, R},
title = {Charles Darwin's reputation: how it changed during the twentieth-century and how it may change again.},
journal = {Endeavour},
volume = {38},
number = {3-4},
pages = {257-267},
doi = {10.1016/j.endeavour.2014.10.009},
pmid = {25455542},
issn = {1873-1929},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biological Evolution ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Natural Science Disciplines/*history ; *Selection, Genetic ; United Kingdom ; },
abstract = {Charles Darwin died in 1882. During the twentieth century his reputation varied through time, as the scientific foundation of evolutionary theory changed. Beginning the century as an intellectual hero, he soon became a virtual footnote as experimental approaches to evolution began to develop. As the Modern Synthesis developed his reputation began to rise again until eventually he was identified as a founding father of the Modern Synthesis itself. In the meantime, developmental approaches to evolution began to challenge certain aspects of the Modern Synthesis. Synthesis authors attempted to refute the relevance of development by methodological arguments, some of them indirectly credited to Darwin. By the end of the century, molecular genetics had given new life to development approaches to evolution, now called evo devo. This must be seen as a refutation of the aforesaid methodological arguments of the Modern Synthesis advocates. By the way, we can also see now how the historiography that credited Darwin with the Synthesis was in error. In conclusion, one more historical revision is suggested.},
}
@article {pmid25448539,
year = {2014},
author = {Scheffler, RW},
title = {Following cancer viruses through the laboratory, clinic, and society.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {48 Pt B},
number = {},
pages = {185-188},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.09.004},
pmid = {25448539},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Biomedical Research/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Laboratories/history ; Molecular Biology/history ; Neoplasms/*history/virology ; Science/*history ; Vaccines/history ; *Viruses ; },
abstract = {These essays in this special issue follow cancer viruses as a means of better understanding the history of biomedicine. Spanning the worlds of chronic and infectious disease research, the history of cancer viruses touches upon an enormous diversity of settings and scientific disciplines. Cancer viruses appeared during the twentieth century as vaccine targets, vaccine contaminants, laboratory anomalies, and tools for molecular biology. Rather than picking one discipline or setting to privilege above others, this issue suggests what can be learned, not only about cancer viruses but also about the character of modern biomedicine, from following these viruses through their different historical trajectories.},
}
@article {pmid25447920,
year = {2015},
author = {Murgatroyd, C},
title = {Editorial to the Special Issue Historical Medical Genetics II.},
journal = {Gene},
volume = {555},
number = {1},
pages = {1},
doi = {10.1016/j.gene.2014.11.023},
pmid = {25447920},
issn = {1879-0038},
mesh = {Disease/*genetics/*history ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; *History of Medicine ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Medicine in the Arts ; },
}
@article {pmid25438476,
year = {2014},
author = {Wennig R, and Humbel R-L, },
title = {[Historic Development of Clinical Biology Laboratories in Luxembourg].},
journal = {Bulletin de la Societe des sciences medicales du Grand-Duche de Luxembourg},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {21-44},
pmid = {25438476},
issn = {0037-9247},
mesh = {Asia ; Biology/*history ; Clinical Laboratory Services/*history ; Europe ; Genetics/history ; Genome, Human ; History, 16th Century ; History, 17th Century ; History, 18th Century ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; History, Ancient ; History, Medieval ; Humans ; Laboratories/*history ; Luxembourg ; Private Sector/history ; Public Sector/history ; United States ; },
abstract = {After a short overview on the development of diagnostic tools in clinical biology at an international level from Antiquity towards today, a history of the clinical biology including public and private institutions in Luxembourg will be outlined.},
}
@article {pmid25431403,
year = {2014},
author = {Morange, M},
title = {What history tells us XXXV. Enhancers: their existence and characteristics have raised puzzling issues since their discovery.},
journal = {Journal of biosciences},
volume = {39},
number = {5},
pages = {741-745},
pmid = {25431403},
issn = {0973-7138},
mesh = {Binding Sites ; Enhancer Elements, Genetic/genetics/*physiology ; Gene Expression Regulation/*physiology ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Models, Genetic ; Transcription Factors/genetics/metabolism/physiology ; },
}
@article {pmid25425662,
year = {2014},
author = {Chakravarti, A},
title = {Profile of Mary-Claire King, 2014 Lasker-Koshland Special Achievement in Medical Science awardee.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {111},
number = {50},
pages = {17690-17692},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1418785111},
pmid = {25425662},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; *Evolution, Molecular ; *Genes, BRCA1 ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Rights Abuses/*prevention & control ; Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid/*genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid25425043,
year = {2014},
author = {Krantz, ID and Opitz, JM},
title = {Introduction--a Pallister jubilee.},
journal = {American journal of medical genetics. Part C, Seminars in medical genetics},
volume = {166C},
number = {4},
pages = {367-369},
doi = {10.1002/ajmg.c.31422},
pmid = {25425043},
issn = {1552-4876},
mesh = {*Chromosome Disorders/history ; Chromosomes, Human, Pair 12 ; *Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid25424727,
year = {2014},
author = {Hall, JG},
title = {Pallister-Hall syndrome has gone the way of modern medical genetics.},
journal = {American journal of medical genetics. Part C, Seminars in medical genetics},
volume = {166C},
number = {4},
pages = {414-418},
doi = {10.1002/ajmg.c.31419},
pmid = {25424727},
issn = {1552-4876},
mesh = {*Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Pallister-Hall Syndrome/*diagnosis/*genetics/history ; },
abstract = {The Pallister-Hall syndrome (PHS) was identified and described as a specific entity in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Subsequently, many patients were reported expanding the phenotype. Familial cases demonstrated variability and lead to linkage and then gene identification. Mutations in the responsible gene, GLI3 are also known to be involved in several other disorders. Genotype/phenotype correlations have led to fine mapping of GLI3 and the recognition that PHS is caused by dominant negative mutations in the middle third of the gene.},
}
@article {pmid25424535,
year = {2014},
author = {Elias, AF},
title = {The Shodair Medical Genetics Department--recent past and future developments.},
journal = {American journal of medical genetics. Part C, Seminars in medical genetics},
volume = {166C},
number = {4},
pages = {381-386},
doi = {10.1002/ajmg.c.31417},
pmid = {25424535},
issn = {1552-4876},
mesh = {*Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Hospital Departments/history ; *Hospitals, Pediatric/history ; Humans ; Montana ; },
abstract = {Philip Pallister and John Opitz laid the ground work for a unique genetic service model in Montana that continues to flourish through ongoing support by the Montana Legislature, the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services and the Shodair Foundation. At the heart of the model are clinical and laboratory genetic specialists based at Shodair Children's Hospital in Helena providing genetic care for patients through outreach clinics. Clinical services are supported by a state-of-the-art cytogenetics and molecular genetic laboratory as well a fetal genetic pathology program. Over the years, the reach of regular genetics clinics expanded to include large geographic areas including northwest (Kalispell), west central (Missoula), southwest (Bozeman, Butte), north central (Great Falls), and south central Montana (Billings). Building on the foundation of its world-renowned pioneers, the next generation of medical geneticists at Shodair carries the responsibility of integrating genomic medicine in the diagnosis and care of their patients, reducing inequality of services within Montana and partnering with colleagues across specialties to develop a more personalized practice of medicine.},
}
@article {pmid25416941,
year = {2014},
author = {Shi, Y},
title = {A glimpse of structural biology through X-ray crystallography.},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {159},
number = {5},
pages = {995-1014},
doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2014.10.051},
pmid = {25416941},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {Animals ; Antineoplastic Agents/chemistry ; Crystallography, X-Ray/*history/*methods ; Databases, Protein ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Membrane Proteins/chemistry/genetics/metabolism ; Models, Molecular ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Protein Kinases/chemistry/genetics/metabolism ; Proteins/*chemistry/genetics/metabolism ; },
abstract = {Since determination of the myoglobin structure in 1957, X-ray crystallography, as the anchoring tool of structural biology, has played an instrumental role in deciphering the secrets of life. Knowledge gained through X-ray crystallography has fundamentally advanced our views on cellular processes and greatly facilitated development of modern medicine. In this brief narrative, I describe my personal understanding of the evolution of structural biology through X-ray crystallography-using as examples mechanistic understanding of protein kinases and integral membrane proteins-and comment on the impact of technological development and outlook of X-ray crystallography.},
}
@article {pmid25393683,
year = {2014},
author = {Sijmons, RH and te Meerman, GJ and Hofstra, RM},
title = {Charles Buys (1942-2014).},
journal = {European journal of human genetics : EJHG},
volume = {22},
number = {12},
pages = {1343-1344},
doi = {10.1038/ejhg.2014.207},
pmid = {25393683},
issn = {1476-5438},
mesh = {Carcinoma, Renal Cell/genetics/therapy ; Genes, Tumor Suppressor/physiology ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Netherlands ; Small Cell Lung Carcinoma/genetics/therapy ; Societies, Scientific ; },
}
@article {pmid25367673,
year = {2014},
author = {McArdle, JJ},
title = {Loehlin's original models and model contributions.},
journal = {Behavior genetics},
volume = {44},
number = {6},
pages = {614-619},
doi = {10.1007/s10519-014-9688-0},
pmid = {25367673},
issn = {1573-3297},
support = {R01 AG007137/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States ; R37 AG007137/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States ; AG07137-23/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Computer Simulation/history ; Genetics, Behavioral/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Models, Psychological ; Personality ; Probability ; },
abstract = {This is a short story about John C. Loehlin who is now at the University of Texas at Austin, dealing with his original simulation models and developments, which led to his current latent variable models. This talk was initially presented at a special meeting for John before the BGA in Rhode Island, and I was very pleased to contribute. It probably goes without saying, but John helped create this important society, has been a key contributor to this journal for several decades, and he deserves a lot for this leadership.},
}
@article {pmid25364807,
year = {2014},
author = {Kriegstein, AR},
title = {Yoshiki Sasai (1962–2014).},
journal = {Neuron},
volume = {83},
number = {6},
pages = {1237-1238},
pmid = {25364807},
issn = {1097-4199},
mesh = {Developmental Biology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Japan ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Pluripotent Stem Cells ; },
}
@article {pmid25356973,
year = {2015},
author = {Howard-Peebles, PN},
title = {Peripatetic southern cytogenetics.},
journal = {Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics},
volume = {17},
number = {5},
pages = {425-426},
doi = {10.1038/gim.2014.159},
pmid = {25356973},
issn = {1530-0366},
mesh = {*Cytogenetics/history/methods ; Fragile X Syndrome/diagnosis/genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25356751,
year = {2014},
author = {Hansson, GK},
title = {A journey in science: medical scientist in translation.},
journal = {Molecular medicine (Cambridge, Mass.)},
volume = {20},
number = {},
pages = {381-389},
doi = {10.2119/molmed.2014.00092},
pmid = {25356751},
issn = {1528-3658},
mesh = {Awards and Prizes ; *Genetic Predisposition to Disease ; Genetics, Population/history ; Genomics ; Hematologic Diseases/*genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Medicine/history ; Translational Medical Research/*history ; },
abstract = {Real innovations in medicine and science are historic and singular; the stories behind each occurrence are precious. At Molecular Medicine we have established the Anthony Cerami Award in Translational Medicine to document and preserve these histories. The monographs recount the seminal events as told in the voice of the original investigators who provided the crucial early insight. These essays capture the essence of discovery, chronicling the birth of ideas that created new fields of research; and launched trajectories that persisted and ultimately influenced how disease is prevented, diagnosed and treated. In this volume, the Cerami Award Monograph is by Göran K Hansson, MD, PhD, Karolinska Institute. A visionary in the field of cardiovascular research, this is the story of Dr. Hansson's scientific journey.},
}
@article {pmid25354686,
year = {2014},
author = {Nissen, P and Heilesen, L},
title = {Brian Clark has died--marking the end of an era: Professor Brian Frederic Carl Clark, founder of Structural Biology Research at Aarhus University, died on Monday, October 6, 2014. Aged 78 years.},
journal = {IUBMB life},
volume = {66},
number = {10},
pages = {655-656},
doi = {10.1002/iub.1325},
pmid = {25354686},
issn = {1521-6551},
mesh = {Biomedical Research/history ; Denmark ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Multiprotein Complexes/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid25351621,
year = {2014},
author = {Waldman, I and Turkheimer, E},
title = {Introduction to a Festschrift for John Loehlin.},
journal = {Behavior genetics},
volume = {44},
number = {6},
pages = {547-548},
doi = {10.1007/s10519-014-9687-1},
pmid = {25351621},
issn = {1573-3297},
mesh = {Genetics, Behavioral/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid25326323,
year = {2015},
author = {Davis, AP and Grondin, CJ and Lennon-Hopkins, K and Saraceni-Richards, C and Sciaky, D and King, BL and Wiegers, TC and Mattingly, CJ},
title = {The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database's 10th year anniversary: update 2015.},
journal = {Nucleic acids research},
volume = {43},
number = {Database issue},
pages = {D914-20},
doi = {10.1093/nar/gku935},
pmid = {25326323},
issn = {1362-4962},
support = {R01-ES019604/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States ; R01 ES023788/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States ; R01-ES014065/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States ; P20 GM104318/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; R01 ES019604/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States ; P20 GM103423/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; R01 ES014065/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {*Databases, Chemical/history ; Disease/etiology/genetics ; Genomics/history ; History, 21st Century ; Internet ; Phenotype ; *Toxicogenetics/history ; },
abstract = {Ten years ago, the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org/) was developed out of a need to formalize, harmonize and centralize the information on numerous genes and proteins responding to environmental toxic agents across diverse species. CTD's initial approach was to facilitate comparisons of nucleotide and protein sequences of toxicologically significant genes by curating these sequences and electronically annotating them with chemical terms from their associated references. Since then, however, CTD has vastly expanded its scope to robustly represent a triad of chemical-gene, chemical-disease and gene-disease interactions that are manually curated from the scientific literature by professional biocurators using controlled vocabularies, ontologies and structured notation. Today, CTD includes 24 million toxicogenomic connections relating chemicals/drugs, genes/proteins, diseases, taxa, phenotypes, Gene Ontology annotations, pathways and interaction modules. In this 10th year anniversary update, we outline the evolution of CTD, including our increased data content, new 'Pathway View' visualization tool, enhanced curation practices, pilot chemical-phenotype results and impending exposure data set. The prototype database originally described in our first report has transformed into a sophisticated resource used actively today to help scientists develop and test hypotheses about the etiologies of environmentally influenced diseases.},
}
@article {pmid25316786,
year = {2014},
author = {Hahn, S},
title = {Ellis Englesberg and the discovery of positive control in gene regulation.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {198},
number = {2},
pages = {455-460},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.114.167361},
pmid = {25316786},
issn = {1943-2631},
support = {R01 GM053451/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; R01 GM075114/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; GM053451/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; GM075114/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Escherichia coli/*genetics ; *Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Operon ; Transcription, Genetic ; },
abstract = {Based on his work with the Escherichia coli l-arabinose operon, Ellis Englesberg proposed in 1965 that the regulatory gene araC was an "activator gene" required for positive control of the ara operon. This challenged the widely held belief in a universal mechanism of negative regulation proposed earlier by Jacob and Monod. For years, Englesberg's model was met with deep skepticism. Despite much frustration with complex ad hoc explanations used to challenge his model, Englesberg persisted until the evidence for positive control in ara and other systems became overwhelming. Englesberg's pioneering work enriched the original operon model and had a lasting impact in opening new and exciting ways of thinking about transcriptional regulation.},
}
@article {pmid25316778,
year = {2014},
author = {Ausubel, FM},
title = {Twists and turns: my career path and concerns about the future.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {198},
number = {2},
pages = {431-434},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.114.169102},
pmid = {25316778},
issn = {1943-2631},
support = {P30 DK040561/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Host-Pathogen Interactions/*genetics ; Immunity, Innate/genetics ; Molecular Biology/history ; Plant Immunity/*genetics ; United States ; },
abstract = {THE Genetics Society of America's Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal is awarded to an individual GSA member for lifetime achievement in the field of genetics. The 2014 recipient is Frederick Ausubel, whose 40-year career has centered on host-microbe interactions and host innate immunity. He is widely recognized as a key scientist responsible for establishing the modern postrecombinant DNA field of host-microbe interactions using simple nonvertebrate hosts. He has used genetic approaches to conduct pioneering work that spawned six related areas of research: the evolution and regulation of Rhizobium genes involved in symbiotic nitrogen fixation; the regulation of Rhizobium genes by two-component regulatory systems involving histidine kinases; the establishment of Arabidopsis thaliana as a worldwide model system; the identification of a large family of plant disease resistance genes; the identification of so-called multi-host bacterial pathogens; and the demonstration that Caenorhabditis elegans has an evolutionarily conserved innate immune system that shares features of both plant and mammalian immunity.},
}
@article {pmid25303793,
year = {2014},
author = {Berry, D},
title = {Bruno to Brünn; or the Pasteurization of Mendelian genetics.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {48 Pt B},
number = {},
pages = {280-286},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.09.002},
pmid = {25303793},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {*Agriculture/history ; France ; *Genetics/history ; *Historiography ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; *Literature, Modern/history ; *Pasteurization/history ; *Philosophy/history ; *Sociology/history ; },
}
@article {pmid25295950,
year = {2014},
author = {King, MC},
title = {Lasker Award winner Mary-Claire King.},
journal = {Nature medicine},
volume = {20},
number = {10},
pages = {1124-1125},
doi = {10.1038/nm.3696},
pmid = {25295950},
issn = {1546-170X},
support = {R01 CA157744/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; R01 CA175716/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; R35 CA197458/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; Breast Neoplasms/*genetics ; Female ; *Genes, BRCA1 ; Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Schizophrenia/genetics ; Social Justice/history ; },
}
@article {pmid25288111,
year = {2014},
author = {Tilghman, SM},
title = {Twists and turns: a scientific journey.},
journal = {Annual review of cell and developmental biology},
volume = {30},
number = {},
pages = {1-21},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-cellbio-100913-013512},
pmid = {25288111},
issn = {1530-8995},
mesh = {Amino Acid Sequence ; Animals ; Canada ; Chromosome Walking ; Embryonic Development/genetics ; Eye Proteins/genetics/history ; Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ; Genomic Imprinting ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Homeodomain Proteins/genetics/history ; Humans ; Mice ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Molecular Sequence Data ; National Institutes of Health (U.S.) ; New Jersey ; PAX6 Transcription Factor ; Paired Box Transcription Factors/genetics/history ; RNA Splicing ; RNA, Long Noncoding/genetics/history ; Repressor Proteins/genetics/history ; United States ; Universities/*history ; alpha-Fetoproteins/genetics/history ; beta-Globins/genetics/history ; },
abstract = {In this perspective I look back on the twists and turns that influenced the direction of my scientific career over the past 40 years. From my early ambition to be a chemist to my training in Philadelphia and Bethesda as a molecular biologist, I benefited enormously from generous and valuable mentoring. In my independent career in Philadelphia and Princeton, I was motivated by a keen interest in the changes in gene expression that direct the development of the mammalian embryo and inspired by the creativity and energy of my students, fellows, and research staff. After twelve years as President of Princeton University, I have happily returned to the faculty of the Department of Molecular Biology.},
}
@article {pmid25282391,
year = {2014},
author = {Stark, L and Campbell, ND},
title = {Stowaways in the history of science: the case of simian virus 40 and clinical research on federal prisoners at the US National Institutes of Health, 1960.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {48 Pt B},
number = {},
pages = {218-230},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.07.011},
pmid = {25282391},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Animals ; Biomedical Research/ethics/*history ; Historiography ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/history ; *Morals ; National Institutes of Health (U.S.)/history ; Nontherapeutic Human Experimentation/ethics/history ; Polyomavirus Infections/*history/virology ; Prisoners/history ; Prisons/*history ; Respiratory Syncytial Viruses ; Science/ethics/history ; *Simian virus 40 ; Tumor Virus Infections/*history/virology ; United States ; Virology/ethics/*history ; },
abstract = {In 1960, J. Anthony Morris, a molecular biologist at the US National Institutes of Health conducted one of the only non-therapeutic clinical studies of the cancer virus SV40. Morris and his research team aimed to determine whether SV40 was a serious harm to human health, since many scientists at the time suspected that SV40 caused cancer in humans based on evidence from in vivo animal studies and experiments with human tissue. Morris found that SV40 had no significant effect but his claim has remained controversial among scientists and policymakers through the present day--both on scientific and ethical grounds. Why did Morris only conduct one clinical study on the cancer-causing potential of SV40 in healthy humans? We use the case to explain how empirical evidence and ethical imperatives are, paradoxically, often dependent on each other and mutually exclusive in clinical research, which leaves answers to scientific and ethical questions unsettled. This paper serves two goals: first, it documents a unique--and uniquely important--study of clinical research on SV40. Second, it introduces the concept of "the stowaway," which is a special type of contaminant that changes the past in the present moment. In the history of science, stowaways are misfortunes that nonetheless afford research that otherwise would have been impossible specifically by creating new pasts. This case (Morris' study) and concept (the stowaway) bring together history of science and philosophy of history for productive dialog.},
}
@article {pmid25276872,
year = {2014},
author = {Nye, MJ},
title = {Mine, thine, and ours: collaboration and co-authorship in the material culture of the mid-twentieth century chemical laboratory.},
journal = {Ambix},
volume = {61},
number = {3},
pages = {211-235},
doi = {10.1179/0002698014Z.00000000055},
pmid = {25276872},
issn = {0002-6980},
mesh = {Authorship/*history ; California ; Chemistry/*history ; *Cooperative Behavior ; Crystallography, X-Ray/*history ; England ; Germany ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Molecular Structure ; },
abstract = {Patterns of collaboration and co-authorship in chemical science from the 1920s to the 1960s are examined with an eye to frequency of co-authorship and differences in allocation of credit during a period of increasing team research and specialization within chemical research groups. Three research leaders in the cross-disciplinary and cutting edge field of X-ray crystallography and molecular structure are the focus of this historical study within a framework of sociological literature on different collaborative patterns followed by eminent scientists. The examples of Michael Polanyi in Berlin and Manchester, Linus Pauling in Pasadena, and Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin in Oxford demonstrate the need to de-centre historical narrative from the heroic 'he' or 'she' to the collaborative 'they.' These cases demonstrate, too, the roles of disciplinary apprenticeships, local conditions, and individual personalities for historical explanation that transcends universal generalizations about scientific practice, material culture, and sociological trends.},
}
@article {pmid25264775,
year = {2014},
author = {McPherson, JD},
title = {A defining decade in DNA sequencing.},
journal = {Nature methods},
volume = {11},
number = {10},
pages = {1003-1005},
doi = {10.1038/nmeth.3106},
pmid = {25264775},
issn = {1548-7105},
mesh = {Animals ; Genome ; Genomics/history/trends ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; PubMed ; Sequence Analysis, DNA/*methods/*trends ; Sequence Analysis, RNA/methods/trends ; },
}
@article {pmid25257081,
year = {2014},
author = {Potter, H},
title = {David H. Dressler 1941-2014.},
journal = {Nature genetics},
volume = {46},
number = {10},
pages = {1044},
doi = {10.1038/ng.3099},
pmid = {25257081},
issn = {1546-1718},
support = {R01 AG037942/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States ; R01 NS076291/NS/NINDS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Bacteriophage phi X 174/*genetics ; *DNA Replication ; DNA, Viral/*genetics/ultrastructure ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Microscopy, Electron ; Molecular Biology/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25246583,
year = {2014},
author = {Davis, TH},
title = {Profile of Daniel E. Gottschling.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {111},
number = {39},
pages = {14007-14008},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1416219111},
pmid = {25246583},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Genetics, Microbial/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Research/history ; Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics ; Telomere/genetics ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25237695,
year = {2014},
author = {Blanchoin, L},
title = {Laurent Blanchoin.},
journal = {Current biology : CB},
volume = {24},
number = {15},
pages = {R674-5},
pmid = {25237695},
issn = {1879-0445},
mesh = {Actin Cytoskeleton/*physiology ; Cell Biology/*history ; France ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; *Morphogenesis ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25237690,
year = {2014},
author = {Ferrie, JE},
title = {Arsenic, antibiotics and interventions.},
journal = {International journal of epidemiology},
volume = {43},
number = {4},
pages = {977-982},
pmid = {25237690},
issn = {1464-3685},
mesh = {Antitreponemal Agents/*history ; *Areca ; *Arsenic Poisoning ; Arsphenamine/*history ; Drinking Water/*chemistry ; *Drug Resistance, Microbial ; Genetics/*history ; *Health Status Disparities ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Social Class ; },
}
@article {pmid25236456,
year = {2014},
author = {Kirkwood, T},
title = {In memoriam Robin Holliday (November 6, 1932-April 9, 2014).},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {198},
number = {1},
pages = {423-424},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.114.167684},
pmid = {25236456},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Recombination, Genetic ; },
}
@article {pmid25220743,
year = {2014},
author = {Van Soom, A and Peelman, L and Holt, WV and Fazeli, A},
title = {An introduction to epigenetics as the link between genotype and environment: a personal view.},
journal = {Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene},
volume = {49 Suppl 3},
number = {},
pages = {2-10},
doi = {10.1111/rda.12341},
pmid = {25220743},
issn = {1439-0531},
mesh = {Animals ; Biological Evolution ; DNA Methylation/genetics ; *Environment ; *Epigenesis, Genetic/genetics ; Epigenomics/history ; Female ; Gene-Environment Interaction ; Genomic Imprinting ; *Genotype ; History, 18th Century ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Malnutrition ; Pregnancy ; Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ; Selection, Genetic ; Twin Studies as Topic ; },
abstract = {Lamarck was one of the first scientists who attempted to explain evolution, and he is especially well known for formulating the concept that acquired characteristics can be transmitted to future generations and may therefore steer evolution. Although Lamarckism fell out of favour soon after the publication of Darwin's work on natural selection and evolution, the concept of transmission of acquired characteristics has recently gained renewed attention and has led to some rethinking of the standard evolutionary model. Epigenetics, or the study of heritable (mitotically and/or meiotically) changes in gene activity that are not brought about by changes in the DNA sequence, can explain some types of ill health in offspring, which have been exposed to stressors during early development, when DNA is most susceptible to such epigenetic influences. In this review, we explain briefly the history of epigenetics and we propose some examples of epigenetic and transgenerational effects demonstrated in humans and animals. Growing evidence is available that the health and phenotype of a given individual is already shaped shortly before and after the time of conception. Some evidence suggests that epigenetic markings, which have been established around conception, can also be transmitted to future generations. This knowledge can possibly be used to revolutionize animal breeding and to increase human and animal health worldwide.},
}
@article {pmid25215481,
year = {2014},
author = {Botstein, D},
title = {Lasker∼Koshland to genetics pioneer.},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {158},
number = {6},
pages = {1230-1232},
doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2014.08.020},
pmid = {25215481},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; Biological Evolution ; Disease/*genetics ; Female ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Human Rights ; Humans ; United States ; },
abstract = {The 2014 Lasker∼Koshland Special Achievement Award will be presented to Mary-Claire King, a pioneer and visionary who revolutionized the use of genetics to identify disease genes, provide insights into human evolution, and champion human rights causes.},
}
@article {pmid25215373,
year = {2014},
author = {Affolte, M and Müller, M},
title = {Walter Jakob Gehring (1939–2014).},
journal = {Developmental cell},
volume = {30},
number = {2},
pages = {120-122},
pmid = {25215373},
issn = {1878-1551},
mesh = {Developmental Biology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Switzerland ; },
}
@article {pmid25196046,
year = {2014},
author = {Hurst, JH},
title = {Pioneering geneticist Mary-Claire King receives the 2014 Lasker~Koshland Special Achievement Award in Medical Science.},
journal = {The Journal of clinical investigation},
volume = {124},
number = {10},
pages = {4148-4151},
doi = {10.1172/JCI78507},
pmid = {25196046},
issn = {1558-8238},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; BRCA1 Protein/genetics ; Biomedical Research/*history ; Breast Neoplasms/*genetics ; Female ; Genetic Predisposition to Disease ; Genetics/*history ; Genomics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid25195318,
year = {2014},
author = {McCandlish, DM and Stoltzfus, A},
title = {Modeling evolution using the probability of fixation: history and implications.},
journal = {The Quarterly review of biology},
volume = {89},
number = {3},
pages = {225-252},
pmid = {25195318},
issn = {0033-5770},
mesh = {Adaptation, Biological ; *Biological Evolution ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; *Models, Genetic ; },
abstract = {Many models of evolution calculate the rate of evolution by multiplying the rate at which new mutations originate within a population by a probability of fixation. Here we review the historical origins, contemporary applications, and evolutionary implications of these "origin-fixation" models, which are widely used in evolutionary genetics, molecular evolution, and phylogenetics. Origin-fixation models were first introduced in 1969, in association with an emerging view of "molecular" evolution. Early origin-fixation models were used to calculate an instantaneous rate of evolution across a large number of independently evolving loci; in the 1980s and 1990s, a second wave of origin-fixation models emerged to address a sequence of fixation events at a single locus. Although origin fixation models have been applied to a broad array of problems in contemporary evolutionary research, their rise in popularity has not been accompanied by an increased appreciation of their restrictive assumptions or their distinctive implications. We argue that origin-fixation models constitute a coherent theory of mutation-limited evolution that contrasts sharply with theories of evolution that rely on the presence of standing genetic variation. A major unsolved question in evolutionary biology is the degree to which these models provide an accurate approximation of evolution in natural populations.},
}
@article {pmid25194808,
year = {2014},
author = {Hattori, N and Ushijima, T},
title = {Compendium of aberrant DNA methylation and histone modifications in cancer.},
journal = {Biochemical and biophysical research communications},
volume = {455},
number = {1-2},
pages = {3-9},
doi = {10.1016/j.bbrc.2014.08.140},
pmid = {25194808},
issn = {1090-2104},
mesh = {Antineoplastic Agents/history/therapeutic use ; CpG Islands ; *DNA Methylation ; Epigenesis, Genetic/drug effects ; Epigenomics/*history ; Glioma/genetics/history ; Histones/genetics/*history/metabolism ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Mutation ; Neoplasms/diagnosis/drug therapy/genetics/*history ; },
abstract = {Epigenetics now refers to the study or research field related to DNA methylation and histone modifications. Historically, global DNA hypomethylation was first revealed in 1983, and, after a decade, silencing of a tumor suppressor gene by regional DNA hypermethylation was reported. After the proposal of the histone code in the 2000s, alterations of histone methylation were also identified in cancers. Now, it is established that aberrant epigenetic alterations are involved in cancer development and progression, along with mutations and chromosomal losses. Recent cancer genome analyses have revealed a large number of mutations of epigenetic modifiers, supporting their important roles in cancer pathogenesis. Taking advantage of the reversibility of epigenetic alterations, drugs targeting epigenetic regulators and readers have been developed for restoration of normal pattern of the epigenome, and some have already demonstrated clinical benefits. In addition, DNA methylation of specific marker genes can be used as a biomarker for cancer diagnosis, including risk diagnosis, detection of cancers, and pathophysiological diagnosis. In this paper, we will summarize the major concepts of cancer epigenetics, placing emphasis on history.},
}
@article {pmid25191153,
year = {2014},
author = {Rosenberg, LE},
title = {Four children and Yale: the making of a human geneticist: the Grover Powers lecture 2014.},
journal = {The Yale journal of biology and medicine},
volume = {87},
number = {3},
pages = {379-387},
pmid = {25191153},
issn = {1551-4056},
mesh = {Child ; Connecticut ; Female ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Male ; Metabolism, Inborn Errors/genetics/pathology ; Pediatrics/*history ; Universities/*history ; },
abstract = {Dr. Leon E. Rosenberg delivered the following presentation as the Grover Powers Lecturer on May 14, 2014, which served as the focal point of his return to his "adult home" as a Visiting Professor in the Department of Pediatrics. Grover F. Powers, MD, was one of the most influential figures in American Pediatrics and certainly the leader who created the modern Department of Pediatrics at Yale when he was recruited in 1921 from Johns Hopkins and then served as its second chairman from 1927 to 1951. Dr. Powers was an astute clinician and compassionate physician and fostered and shaped the careers of countless professors, chairs, and outstanding pediatricians throughout the country. This lectureship has continued yearly since it first honored Dr. Powers in 1956. The selection of Dr. Rosenberg for this honor recognizes his seminal role at Yale and throughout the world in the fostering and cultivating of the field of human genetics. Dr. Rosenberg served as the inaugural Chief of a joint Division of Medical Genetics in the Departments of Pediatrics and Internal Medicine; he became Chair when this attained Departmental status. Then he served as Dean of the Medical School from 1984 to 1991, before he became President of the Pharmaceutical Research Institute at Bristol-Myers Squibb and later Senior Molecular Biologist and Professor at Princeton University, until his recent retirement. Dr. Rosenberg has received numerous honors that include the Borden Award from the American Academy of Pediatrics, the McKusick Leadership Award from the American Society for Human Genetics, and election to the Institute of Medicine and the National Academy of Sciences.},
}
@article {pmid25189267,
year = {2014},
author = {Focher, F},
title = {Maupertuis: the 'old synthesis'.},
journal = {Journal of genetics},
volume = {93},
number = {2},
pages = {607-608},
pmid = {25189267},
issn = {0973-7731},
mesh = {Animals ; Biological Evolution ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 18th Century ; Humans ; Selection, Genetic ; },
}
@article {pmid25187503,
year = {2014},
author = {Taniguchi, N},
title = {Obituary: Dr. Yoshitaka Nagai (1935-2014).},
journal = {Glycobiology},
volume = {24},
number = {10},
pages = {883-884},
doi = {10.1093/glycob/cwu076},
pmid = {25187503},
issn = {1460-2423},
mesh = {Glycomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid25185109,
year = {2014},
author = {Lander, AD},
title = {Making sense in biology: an appreciation of Julian Lewis.},
journal = {BMC biology},
volume = {12},
number = {},
pages = {57},
doi = {10.1186/s12915-014-0057-5},
pmid = {25185109},
issn = {1741-7007},
support = {P50 GM076516/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Developmental Biology/methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid25184528,
year = {2014},
author = {Jacobs, PA},
title = {An opportune life: 50 years in human cytogenetics.},
journal = {Annual review of genomics and human genetics},
volume = {15},
number = {},
pages = {29-46},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-genom-090413-025457},
pmid = {25184528},
issn = {1545-293X},
mesh = {Chromosome Aberrations ; *Cytodiagnosis ; Cytogenetics/*history ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Karyotyping ; *Microscopy ; },
abstract = {This article is one person's view of human cytogenetics over the past 50 years. The flowering of human cytogenetics led the way to the establishment of clinical genetics as one of the most important developments in medicine in the twentieth century. The article is written from the viewpoint of a scientist who never tired of analyzing the images of dividing cells on the light microscope and interpreting the wealth of information contained in them.},
}
@article {pmid25163212,
year = {2014},
author = {Blankstein, S},
title = {Pharmacogenomics: history, barriers, and regulatory solutions.},
journal = {Food and drug law journal},
volume = {69},
number = {2},
pages = {273-314, ii},
pmid = {25163212},
issn = {1064-590X},
mesh = {Drug Labeling/legislation & jurisprudence ; Drug Therapy/methods ; Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions/genetics ; Equipment Safety ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; History, Ancient ; Humans ; Medical Device Legislation ; Pharmacogenetics/*history/*legislation & jurisprudence ; Product Labeling/legislation & jurisprudence ; United States ; United States Food and Drug Administration ; },
abstract = {Pharmacogenomics is the branch of pharmacology which looks at the influence of genetic variation on drug response, connecting particular genetic markers with the effectiveness or safety of a drug. Pharmacogenomic products promise to improve medical treatment, lower health care costs, and make the new drug pipeline for FDA approval more efficient. In the last fifteen years, the FDA has approved pharmacogenomic drugs to treat a variety of cancers, HIV-AIDS, and coronary artery disease. Yet, progress in the field of pharmacogenomics has lagged behind the optimistic predictions of many researchers and policymakers. A lack of clear regulatory guidance dealing with pharmacogenomic products has been a major barrier to progress in the field. The FDA has, however, made some headway. In a series of guidance documents released between 2005 and 2011, the FDA has clarified much of its policy with respect to the development, approval, and labeling of pharmacogenomic products. Despite these efforts, many regulatory questions remain unanswered. This paper highlights a number of these regulatory gaps and provides recommendations to address them in a way which encourages increased development and clinical uptake of pharmacogenomic products.},
}
@article {pmid25160630,
year = {2014},
author = {Goodman, MF},
title = {The discovery of error-prone DNA polymerase V and its unique regulation by RecA and ATP.},
journal = {The Journal of biological chemistry},
volume = {289},
number = {39},
pages = {26772-26782},
doi = {10.1074/jbc.X114.607374},
pmid = {25160630},
issn = {1083-351X},
support = {R01 ES012259/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase/*history/metabolism ; Escherichia coli/*enzymology ; Escherichia coli Proteins/*history/metabolism ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Rec A Recombinases/*history/metabolism ; },
abstract = {My career pathway has taken a circuitous route, beginning with a Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from The Johns Hopkins University, followed by five postdoctoral years in biology at Hopkins and culminating in a faculty position in biological sciences at the University of Southern California. My startup package in 1973 consisted of $2,500, not to be spent all at once, plus an ancient Packard scintillation counter that had a series of rapidly flashing light bulbs to indicate a radioactive readout in counts/minute. My research pathway has been similarly circuitous. The discovery of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase V (pol V) began with an attempt to identify the mutagenic DNA polymerase responsible for copying damaged DNA as part of the well known SOS regulon. Although we succeeded in identifying a DNA polymerase, one that was induced as part of the SOS response, we actually rediscovered DNA polymerase II, albeit in a new role. A decade later, we discovered a new polymerase, pol V, whose activity turned out to be regulated by bound molecules of RecA protein and ATP. This Reflections article describes our research trajectory, includes a review of key features of DNA damage-induced SOS mutagenesis leading us to pol V, and reflects on some of the principal researchers who have made indispensable contributions to our efforts.},
}
@article {pmid25153039,
year = {2014},
author = {Shinozaki, K},
title = {Interview with Kazuo Shinozaki.},
journal = {Trends in plant science},
volume = {19},
number = {11},
pages = {681-682},
doi = {10.1016/j.tplants.2014.07.008},
pmid = {25153039},
issn = {1878-4372},
mesh = {Botany/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; },
}
@article {pmid25152303,
year = {2014},
author = {Zhang, F},
title = {Chih Tu: a pioneer of Xinjiang's agricultural science.},
journal = {Protein & cell},
volume = {5},
number = {10},
pages = {725-727},
doi = {10.1007/s13238-014-0096-2},
pmid = {25152303},
issn = {1674-8018},
mesh = {Academies and Institutes ; Agriculture/education/*history ; Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Plants, Genetically Modified/growth & development ; },
}
@article {pmid25142515,
year = {2014},
author = {Capocci, M and Santoro, MG and Hightower, LE},
title = {The life and times of Ferruccio Ritossa.},
journal = {Cell stress & chaperones},
volume = {19},
number = {5},
pages = {599-604},
doi = {10.1007/s12192-014-0525-4},
pmid = {25142515},
issn = {1466-1268},
mesh = {DNA/genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Italy ; Male ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {Ferruccio Ritossa wrote these lines only a few months before he died, as a preface to a book he wanted to write and that, unfortunately, we will never be able to read. It was to be the story of his life, an amazing story indeed. With this article, we want to take a picture of Ferruccio's life, a mosaic of events, facts, ideas, hopes, and memories linked in a way that they will not go away, even after "a stroll in our brain."},
}
@article {pmid25131814,
year = {2014},
author = {Foster, DA},
title = {In memoriam: Geoffrey Louis Zubay, 1931-2014. Pioneer in cell-free gene expression studies and molecular genetics.},
journal = {Trends in biochemical sciences},
volume = {39},
number = {11},
pages = {505-506},
doi = {10.1016/j.tibs.2014.07.007},
pmid = {25131814},
issn = {0968-0004},
mesh = {*Cell-Free System ; Gene Expression/*genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25123749,
year = {2014},
author = {Van Eyk, J},
title = {Prof. Michael (Mike) J. Dunn--paying forward.},
journal = {Proteomics. Clinical applications},
volume = {8},
number = {7-8},
pages = {476},
doi = {10.1002/prca.201470045},
pmid = {25123749},
issn = {1862-8354},
mesh = {England ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Proteomics/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid25123476,
year = {2014},
author = {Brandhorst, BP and Emerson, CP},
title = {Tom D. Humphreys II: a pioneer of molecular embryology.},
journal = {Molecular reproduction and development},
volume = {81},
number = {8},
pages = {Fmi},
doi = {10.1002/mrd.22248},
pmid = {25123476},
issn = {1098-2795},
mesh = {Embryology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid25117220,
year = {2014},
author = {Van Damme, EJ},
title = {History of plant lectin research.},
journal = {Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)},
volume = {1200},
number = {},
pages = {3-13},
doi = {10.1007/978-1-4939-1292-6_1},
pmid = {25117220},
issn = {1940-6029},
mesh = {Carbohydrate Metabolism ; Glycomics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Plant Lectins/chemistry/isolation & purification/metabolism ; Research/*history ; },
abstract = {Numerous plant species are known to express one or more lectins or proteins containing a lectin domain, enabling these proteins to select and bind specific carbohydrate structures. The group of plant lectins is quite heterogeneous since lectins differ in their molecular structure, specificity for certain carbohydrate structures, and biological activities resulting therefrom. This chapter presents a short historical overview on how plant lectin research has evolved over the years from a discipline aiming merely at the purification and characterization of plant lectins towards the application of plant lectins as tools in glycobiology.},
}
@article {pmid25116609,
year = {2014},
author = {Ganetzky, B and Wu, CF},
title = {Remembering Obaid Siddiqi, a pioneer in the study of temperature-sensitive paralytic mutants in Drosophila.},
journal = {Journal of biosciences},
volume = {39},
number = {4},
pages = {547-553},
pmid = {25116609},
issn = {0973-7138},
mesh = {Action Potentials/*genetics/physiology ; Animals ; Drosophila Proteins/metabolism ; Drosophila melanogaster ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; India ; Nervous System Physiological Phenomena/*genetics ; Neurosciences/*history ; Paralysis/*genetics ; *Temperature ; },
abstract = {Although Obaid Siddiqi's major research focus in neurogenetics was on chemosensation and olfaction in Drosophila, he made seminal contributions to the study of temperature-sensitive paralytic mutants that paved the way for research that we and many other investigators have continued to pursue. Here we recount Siddiqi's investigation and the impact it had on our own studies especially at a formative stage of our careers. We acknowledge our debt to Obaid Siddiqi and remember him fondly as an inspired and inspiring scientist, mentor, role model and human being.},
}
@article {pmid25116608,
year = {2014},
author = {Fox, MS},
title = {Recalling Obaid.},
journal = {Journal of biosciences},
volume = {39},
number = {4},
pages = {545},
pmid = {25116608},
issn = {0973-7138},
mesh = {Career Choice ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; India ; Neurosciences/*history ; Research/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid25116607,
year = {2014},
author = {Jameel, S and Banerjee, U and VijayRaghavan, K},
title = {Remembering Obaid - one year later.},
journal = {Journal of biosciences},
volume = {39},
number = {4},
pages = {543-544},
pmid = {25116607},
issn = {0973-7138},
mesh = {Animals ; Drosophila melanogaster ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; India ; Nervous System Physiological Phenomena/*genetics ; Neurosciences/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid25105190,
year = {2014},
author = {Clausen, H and Nudelman, E and Hakomori, SI},
title = {Obituary: Steven Bruce Levery (1949–2014).},
journal = {Glycoconjugate journal},
volume = {31},
number = {5},
pages = {339-340},
pmid = {25105190},
issn = {1573-4986},
mesh = {ABO Blood-Group System/chemistry/history/metabolism ; Chemistry/*history/methods ; Glycoconjugates/*chemistry/history/metabolism ; Glycolipids/chemistry/history/metabolism ; Glycomics/history/methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Structure ; Neoplasms/metabolism ; Poetry as Topic ; Proteomics/history/methods ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid25104804,
year = {2014},
author = {Sikela, JM},
title = {Finding and mapping new genes faster than ever: revisited.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {197},
number = {4},
pages = {1063-1067},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.114.165373},
pmid = {25104804},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {3' Untranslated Regions/genetics ; *Chromosome Mapping ; Cloning, Molecular ; DNA, Complementary/*genetics ; Genome, Human ; History, 20th Century ; Human Genome Project/*history ; Humans ; Presenilin-2/genetics/isolation & purification ; Sequence Analysis, DNA ; },
abstract = {This article recounts some of the early days of the Human Genome Project, covering the important and sometimes controversial role that complementary DNA-based approaches played in the discovery and mapping of the majority of human genes. It also describes my involvement in this effort and my lab's development of methods for rapid sequence identification and mapping of human genes.},
}
@article {pmid25098222,
year = {2014},
author = {Villanueva Lozano, M},
title = {[Salvador Armendares: second generation Spanish refugee and pioneer of human genetics in Mexico].},
journal = {Gaceta medica de Mexico},
volume = {150},
number = {4},
pages = {352-361},
pmid = {25098222},
issn = {0016-3813},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Mexico ; Refugees ; Spain ; },
abstract = {This paper gives an analysis of Dr. Salvador Armendares' exile and professional career, with the aim of exploring the relation between the intellectual contributions of the second generation of Spanish refugees in Mexico and the origins of medical genetics in that country. The thesis is that the emigration of European refugees due to political issues, where eugenic values were exalted, paradoxically facilitated the establishment of medical genetics in Mexico. Interpretation of cultural, political, and social factors contributes to the analysis, avoiding Eurocentric and expansionist narratives.},
}
@article {pmid25097260,
year = {2014},
author = {Affolter, M and Wüthrich, K},
title = {Walter Jakob Gehring: A master of developmental biology.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {111},
number = {35},
pages = {12574-12575},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1413434111},
pmid = {25097260},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Developmental Biology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Switzerland ; },
}
@article {pmid25079126,
year = {2013},
author = {Brody, AJ and King, RJ},
title = {Letter to the editor: Genetics and the archaeology of ancient Israel.},
journal = {Human biology},
volume = {85},
number = {6},
pages = {925-940},
doi = {10.3378/027.085.0606},
pmid = {25079126},
issn = {1534-6617},
mesh = {Chromosomes, Human, Y/genetics ; Emigration and Immigration/history ; Ethnic Groups/*genetics/history ; Genetics, Population/history ; Haplotypes ; History, Ancient ; Humans ; Israel/ethnology ; Middle East/ethnology ; },
abstract = {This letter is a call for DNA testing on ancient skeletal materials from the southern Levant to begin a database of genetic information of the inhabitants of this crossroads region. In this region, during the Iron I period traditionally dated to circa 1200-1000 BCE, archaeologists and biblical historians view the earliest presence of a group that called itself Israel. They lived in villages in the varied hill countries of the region, contemporary with urban settlements in the coastal plains, inland valleys, and central hill country attributed to varied indigenous groups collectively called Canaanite. The remnants of Egyptian imperial presence in the region lasted until around 1150 BCE, postdating the arrival of an immigrant group from the Aegean called the Philistines circa 1175 BCE. The period that follows in the southern Levant is marked by the development of territorial states throughout the region, circa 1000-800 BCE. These patrimonial kingdoms, including the United Kingdom of Israel and the divided kingdoms of northern Israel and Judah, coalesced varied peoples under central leadership and newly founded administrative and religious bureaucracies. Ancient DNA testing will give us a further refined understanding of the individuals who peopled the region of the southern Levant throughout its varied archaeological and historic periods and provide scientific data that will support, refute, or nuance our sociohistoric reconstruction of ancient group identities. These social identities may or may not map onto genetic data, but without sampling of ancient DNA we may never know. A database of ancient DNA will also allow for comparisons with modern DNA samples collected throughout the greater region and the Mediterranean littoral, giving a more robust understanding of the long historical trajectories of regional human genetics and the genetics of varied ancestral groups of today's Jewish populations and other cultural groups in the modern Middle East and Mediterranean.},
}
@article {pmid25079124,
year = {2013},
author = {Efron, JM},
title = {Commentary: Jewish genetic origins in the context of past historical and anthropological inquiries.},
journal = {Human biology},
volume = {85},
number = {6},
pages = {901-918},
doi = {10.3378/027.085.0602},
pmid = {25079124},
issn = {1534-6617},
mesh = {Anthropology/history/methods ; Anthropometry/history/methods ; Continental Population Groups/ethnology/genetics ; Genetics, Population/history/methods ; History, 18th Century ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Jews/ethnology/*genetics/history ; Racism/ethnology ; Skull/anatomy & histology ; },
abstract = {The contemporary study of Jewish genetics has a long prehistory dating to the eighteenth century. Prior to the era of genetics, studies of the physical makeup of Jews were undertaken by comparative anatomists and physical anthropologists. In the nineteenth century the field was referred to as "race science." Believed by many race scientists to be a homogeneous and pure race, Jews occupied a central position in the discourse of race science because they were seen as the control group par excellence to determine the relative primacy of nature or nurture in the development of racial characteristics. In the nineteenth century, claims of Jewish homogeneity prompted research that sought to explain morphological differences among Jews, chief among them the difference between Sephardim and Ashkenazim. I examine some of these original debates here with a view to placing them in their historical and cultural contexts.},
}
@article {pmid25077349,
year = {2013},
author = {},
title = {Festschrift in honor of Giovanni Neri--polyhedral and down-to-earth mentor.},
journal = {American journal of medical genetics. Part A},
volume = {161A},
number = {11},
pages = {2687-2920},
pmid = {25077349},
issn = {1552-4833},
mesh = {Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Italy ; },
}
@article {pmid25066898,
year = {2014},
author = {Bangham, J},
title = {Blood groups and human groups: collecting and calibrating genetic data after World War Two.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {47 Pt A},
number = {},
pages = {74-86},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.008},
pmid = {25066898},
issn = {1879-2499},
support = {WT089652MA//Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {*Blood ; Blood Group Antigens/*history ; Colonialism/history ; Continental Population Groups/genetics/history ; Data Collection/*history ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Health Resources ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Laboratories/history ; Literature, Modern ; Population Groups/*genetics ; Public Health/history ; World War II ; },
abstract = {Arthur Mourant's The Distribution of the Human Blood Groups (1954) was an "indispensable" reference book on the "anthropology of blood groups" containing a vast collection of human genetic data. It was based on the results of blood-grouping tests carried out on half-a-million people and drew together studies on diverse populations around the world: from rural communities, to religious exiles, to volunteer transfusion donors. This paper pieces together sequential stages in the production of a small fraction of the blood-group data in Mourant's book, to examine how he and his colleagues made genetic data from people. Using sources from several collecting projects, I follow how blood was encountered, how it was inscribed, and how it was turned into a laboratory resource. I trace Mourant's analytical and representational strategies to make blood groups both credibly 'genetic' and understood as relevant to human ancestry, race and history. In this story, 'populations' were not simply given, but were produced through public health, colonial and post-colonial institutions, and by the labour and expertise of subjects, assistants and mediators. Genetic data were not self-evidently 'biological', but were shaped by existing historical and geographical identities, by political relationships, and by notions of kinship and belonging.},
}
@article {pmid25053180,
year = {2014},
author = {Garagna, S and Page, J and Fernandez-Donoso, R and Zuccotti, M and Searle, JB},
title = {The Robertsonian phenomenon in the house mouse: mutation, meiosis and speciation.},
journal = {Chromosoma},
volume = {123},
number = {6},
pages = {529-544},
doi = {10.1007/s00412-014-0477-6},
pmid = {25053180},
issn = {1432-0886},
mesh = {Animals ; Centromere/*chemistry/ultrastructure ; Chromosome Aberrations ; Chromosome Segregation ; Chromosomes, Mammalian/chemistry/ultrastructure ; Female ; Fertility/genetics ; *Genetic Speciation ; History, 20th Century ; Karyotype ; Male ; Meiosis/*genetics ; Mice/*genetics ; Molecular Biology/history ; *Translocation, Genetic ; },
abstract = {Many different chromosomal races with reduced chromosome number due to the presence of Robertsonian fusion metacentrics have been described in western Europe and northern Africa, within the distribution area of the western house mouse Mus musculus domesticus. This subspecies of house mouse has become the ideal model for studies to elucidate the processes of chromosome mutation and fixation that lead to the formation of chromosomal races and for studies on the impact of chromosome heterozygosities on reproductive isolation and speciation. In this review, we briefly describe the history of the discovery of the first and subsequent metacentric races in house mice; then, we focus on the molecular composition of the centromeric regions involved in chromosome fusion to examine the molecular characteristics that may explain the great variability of the karyotype that house mice show. The influence that metacentrics exert on the nuclear architecture of the male meiocytes and the consequences on meiotic progression are described to illustrate the impact that chromosomal heterozygosities exert on fertility of house mice-of relevance to reproductive isolation and speciation. The evolutionary significance of the Robertsonian phenomenon in the house mouse is discussed in the final section of this review.},
}
@article {pmid25049107,
year = {2014},
author = {Lipphardt, V},
title = {"Geographical Distribution Patterns of Various Genes": genetic studies of human variation after 1945.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {47 Pt A},
number = {},
pages = {50-61},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.006},
pmid = {25049107},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Anthropology, Physical/*history ; Anthropometry ; Blood Group Antigens ; Colonialism/history ; Continental Population Groups/genetics/*history ; Eugenics/*history ; *Genetic Variation ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Science/history ; World War II ; },
abstract = {After WWII, physical anthropologists and human geneticists struggled hard to demonstrate distance from 'racial science' and 'eugenics'. This was a crucial factor in the 'revolution' of physical anthropology in the 1950s, as contemporary accounts referred to it. My paper examines the apparent turn during this period from anthropometric measurements to blood-group analysis, and from 'races' to 'small endogamous populations', or 'isolates', as the unit of study. I demonstrate that anthropometry and blood-group analysis were used simultaneously and in the same research projects until the 1960s. Isolated populations were the new target groups of human population geneticists, from large continental groups to small village populations. Colonial infrastructures provided suitable conditions for these kinds of transnational research projects. I argue that this new framework helped to translate much of the content of earlier racial studies into a less attackable approach to human variation.},
}
@article {pmid25045177,
year = {2014},
author = {Hogan, AJ},
title = {The 'morbid anatomy' of the human genome: tracing the observational and representational approaches of postwar genetics and biomedicine the William Bynum Prize Essay.},
journal = {Medical history},
volume = {58},
number = {3},
pages = {315-336},
doi = {10.1017/mdh.2014.26},
pmid = {25045177},
issn = {2048-8343},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Biomedical Research/*history ; Chromosomes/genetics ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; *Genome, Human ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; },
abstract = {This paper explores evolving conceptions and depictions of the human genome among human and medical geneticists during the postwar period. Historians of science and medicine have shown significant interest in the use of informational approaches in postwar genetics, which treat the genome as an expansive digital data set composed of three billion DNA nucleotides. Since the 1950s, however, geneticists have largely interacted with the human genome at the microscopically visible level of chromosomes. Mindful of this, I examine the observational and representational approaches of postwar human and medical genetics. During the 1970s and 1980s, the genome increasingly came to be understood as, at once, a discrete part of the human anatomy and a standardised scientific object. This paper explores the role of influential medical geneticists in recasting the human genome as being a visible, tangible, and legible entity, which was highly relevant to traditional medical thinking and practice. I demonstrate how the human genome was established as an object amenable to laboratory and clinical research, and argue that the observational and representational approaches of postwar medical genetics reflect, more broadly, the interdisciplinary efforts underlying the development of contemporary biomedicine.},
}
@article {pmid25043504,
year = {2014},
author = {Heim, S},
title = {Boveri at 100: Boveri, chromosomes and cancer.},
journal = {The Journal of pathology},
volume = {234},
number = {2},
pages = {138-141},
doi = {10.1002/path.4406},
pmid = {25043504},
issn = {1096-9896},
mesh = {Chromosomes, Human/*genetics ; Cytogenetics/*history ; Germany ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Medical Oncology/*history ; *Neoplasms/genetics ; },
abstract = {Microscopic studies of chromosomes in cells cultured from leukaemias and solid tumours have helped confirm the central tenet of Boveri's somatic mutation theory of cancer, namely that acquired chromosomal aberrations of susceptible target cells may cause their neoplastic transformation. Cancer cytogenetics - especially when used together with appropriate molecular genetic investigations of tumour parenchyma cells - offers diagnostic and prognostic information, insights into the clonal composition and evolution of neoplasms, and information about how the observed gains, losses and balanced relocations work pathogenetically. In the future, one may expect cancer cytogenetics to focus not only on how the various aberrations contribute to tumourigenesis, but also on why and how they occur, as well as on the biological meaning behind the polyclonality detected in several epithelial neoplasms. Finally, the study of different nuclear compartments during interphase may add to our understanding of how large-scale numerical and structural karyotypic aberrations may disturb normal controls of cell division and death to induce neoplastic transformation.},
}
@article {pmid25042975,
year = {2014},
author = {Widmer, A},
title = {Making blood 'Melanesian': fieldwork and isolating techniques in genetic epidemiology (1963-1976).},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {47 Pt A},
number = {},
pages = {118-129},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.012},
pmid = {25042975},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Continental Population Groups/*genetics ; Culture ; Ethnic Groups/*genetics ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Hemoglobins/genetics ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Malaria/genetics ; Melanesia ; Molecular Epidemiology/*history ; United States ; },
abstract = {'Isolated' populations did not exist unproblematically for life scientists to study. This article examines the practical and conceptual labour, and the historical contingencies that rendered populations legible as 'isolates' for population geneticists. Though a standard historiographical narrative tells us that population geneticists were moving from typological understandings of biological variation to processual ones, cultural variation was understood as vulnerable to homogenisation. I chart the importance that D. Carleton Gajdusek placed on isolates from his promotion of genetic epidemiology in WHO technical reports and at a Cold Spring Harbour symposium to his fieldwork routines and collection practices in a group of South Pacific islands. His fieldwork techniques combined social, cultural and historical knowledge of the research subjects in order to isolate biological descent using genealogies. Having isolated a population, Gajdusek incorporated biological materials derived from that population into broad categories of 'Melanesian' and 'race' to generate statements about the genetics of abnormal haemoglobins and malaria. Alongside an analysis of Gajdusek's practices, I present different narratives of descent, kinship and identities learned during my ethnographic work in Vanuatu. These alternatives show tacit decisions made pertaining to scale in the production of 'isolates'.},
}
@article {pmid25032986,
year = {2015},
author = {Toriello, HV},
title = {The genetics of luck.},
journal = {Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics},
volume = {17},
number = {2},
pages = {164-165},
doi = {10.1038/gim.2014.87},
pmid = {25032986},
issn = {1530-0366},
mesh = {*Famous Persons ; *Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid25030511,
year = {2014},
author = {Thorn, SM},
title = {David Gutmann: making science work for patients.},
journal = {The Lancet. Neurology},
volume = {13},
number = {8},
pages = {762},
doi = {10.1016/S1474-4422(14)70163-2},
pmid = {25030511},
issn = {1474-4465},
mesh = {Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Medical Laboratory Personnel/*history ; Neurology/*history/trends ; },
}
@article {pmid25022488,
year = {2014},
author = {Suárez-Díaz, E},
title = {Indigenous populations in Mexico: medical anthropology in the work of Ruben Lisker in the 1960s.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {47 Pt A},
number = {},
pages = {108-117},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.011},
pmid = {25022488},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {American Native Continental Ancestry Group/*history ; Anthropology, Medical/*history ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Hematology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Mexico ; Population Groups ; World War II ; },
abstract = {Ruben Lisker's research on the genetic hematological traits of Mexican indigenous populations illustrates the intersection of international health policies and the local modernizing nationalism of the Mexican post-revolution period. Lisker's surveys of blood group types, and of G6PD (glucose-6-phosphodehydrogenase) and hemoglobin variants in indigenous populations, incorporated linguistic criteria in the sampling methods, and historical and cultural anthropological accounts in the interpretation of results. In doing so, Lisker heavily relied on the discourse and the infrastructure created by the indigenista program and its institutions. Simultaneously, Lisker's research was thoroughly supported by international and bilateral agencies and programs, including the malaria eradication campaign of the 1950s and 1960s. As a member of the scientific elite he was able to make original contributions to the postwar field of human population genetics. His systematic research illustrates the complex entanglement of local and international contexts that explains the co-construction of global knowledge on human variation after WWII.(1.)},
}
@article {pmid25018012,
year = {2015},
author = {Rikhy, R and Kumar, V and Basole, A and Sanyal, S},
title = {Remembering K. S. Krishnan (1946-2014).},
journal = {Journal of neurogenetics},
volume = {29},
number = {1},
pages = {1-3},
doi = {10.3109/01677063.2014.943890},
pmid = {25018012},
issn = {1563-5260},
mesh = {Academies and Institutes/history ; Aged ; Electrophysiology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; India ; Male ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Research/*history ; },
abstract = {Dr. K. S. Krishnan was on the faculty of the Division of Biological Sciences at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) in Mumbai, India, and later emeritus professor at the National Center for Biological Sciences (NCBS) in Bangalore, India. His research using fruit flies has contributed richly to our understanding of synaptic function and mechanisms of anesthetic action. Dr. Krishnan passed away suddenly of a heart attack on the 24th of May, 2014. Below a few of his students fondly recall how it was to work in his group.},
}
@article {pmid25015798,
year = {2014},
author = {Alonso, JG},
title = {Lawrence D. Longo: from chronic fetal hypoxia to proteomic predictors of fetal distress syndrome - a life devoted to research and mentoring based on virtue-ethics.},
journal = {Advances in experimental medicine and biology},
volume = {814},
number = {},
pages = {15-26},
doi = {10.1007/978-1-4939-1031-1_3},
pmid = {25015798},
issn = {0065-2598},
mesh = {Cardiovascular Physiological Phenomena ; Chronic Disease ; Developmental Biology/ethics/*history ; Fetal Distress/*history/physiopathology ; Fetal Hypoxia/*history/physiopathology ; History, 20th Century ; *Mentors ; Proteomics/*history ; },
abstract = {The present chapter presents the experience of the author during his fellowship granted by the Fogarty Foundation of the NIH in the Division of Perinatal Biology, Loma Linda University, from 1989 to 1991. Experiments on maternal and fetal responses to long-term hypoxemia (including high-altitude) were performed successfully in pregnant sheep and their fetuses.Cardiovascular, hormonal and blood flow distribution responses were studied under a strict experimental protocol. As result of this research, four papers were accepted for publication in major scientific journals, and have served as basis for further research.Most of all, the leadership, virtue-based ethics, perseverance and continuous stimulus of Lawrence D. Longo is presented as an example to follow for future generations.},
}
@article {pmid25002089,
year = {2014},
author = {Feklístov, A and Sharon, BD and Darst, SA and Gross, CA},
title = {Bacterial sigma factors: a historical, structural, and genomic perspective.},
journal = {Annual review of microbiology},
volume = {68},
number = {},
pages = {357-376},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-micro-092412-155737},
pmid = {25002089},
issn = {1545-3251},
support = {T32 EB009383/EB/NIBIB NIH HHS/United States ; T32 GM008284/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; T32GM008284/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Bacteria/chemistry/genetics/*metabolism ; Bacterial Proteins/*chemistry/*genetics/metabolism ; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genomics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Microbiology/*history ; Sigma Factor/*chemistry/*genetics/metabolism ; },
abstract = {Transcription initiation is the crucial focal point of gene expression in prokaryotes. The key players in this process, sigma factors (σs), associate with the catalytic core RNA polymerase to guide it through the essential steps of initiation: promoter recognition and opening, and synthesis of the first few nucleotides of the transcript. Here we recount the key advances in σ biology, from their discovery 45 years ago to the most recent progress in understanding their structure and function at the atomic level. Recent data provide important structural insights into the mechanisms whereby σs initiate promoter opening. We discuss both the housekeeping σs, which govern transcription of the majority of cellular genes, and the alternative σs, which direct RNA polymerase to specialized operons in response to environmental and physiological cues. The review concludes with a genome-scale view of the extracytoplasmic function σs, the most abundant group of alternative σs.},
}
@article {pmid25002070,
year = {2014},
author = {Bangham, J and de Chadarevian, S},
title = {Human heredity after 1945: moving populations centre stage.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {47 Pt A},
number = {},
pages = {45-49},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.005},
pmid = {25002070},
issn = {1879-2499},
support = {//Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Anthropology/history ; Colonialism ; Demography/history ; Epidemiology/history ; *Genetics, Population/history ; *Heredity ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Politics ; Public Health/history ; *Research/history ; Warfare ; },
abstract = {The essays in this issue look at the contested history of human heredity after 1945 from a new analytical angle, that of populations and the ways in which they were constructed and studied. One consequence of this approach is that we do not limit our attention to the disciplinary study of genetics. After the Second World War, populations became a central topic for an array of fields, including demography, anthropology, epidemiology, and public health. Human heredity had a role in all of these: demographers carried out mental surveys in efforts to distinguish hereditary from environmental factors, doctors screened newborns and tested pregnant women for chromosome disorders; anthropologists collected blood from remote locations to gain insights into the evolutionary history of human populations; geneticists monitored people exposed to radiation. Through this work, populations were labelled as clinical, normal, primitive, pure, vulnerable or exotic. We ask: how were populations chosen, who qualified as members, and how was the study of human heredity shaped by technical, institutional and geopolitical conditions? By following the practical and conceptual work to define populations as objects of research, the essays trace the circulation of practices across different fields and contexts, bringing into view new actors, institutions, and geographies. By doing so the collection shows how human heredity research was linked to the broader politics of the postwar world, one profoundly conditioned by Cold War tensions, by nationalist concerns, by colonial and post-colonial struggles, by modernisation projects and by a new internationalism.},
}
@article {pmid25001362,
year = {2015},
author = {Goldstein, DM and Stawkowski, ME},
title = {James V. Neel and Yuri E. Dubrova: Cold War debates and the genetic effects of low-dose radiation.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {48},
number = {1},
pages = {67-98},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-014-9385-0},
pmid = {25001362},
issn = {0022-5010},
mesh = {*Chernobyl Nuclear Accident ; DNA, Satellite/*radiation effects ; Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Japan ; Minisatellite Repeats/radiation effects ; Mutation/radiation effects ; Radiation Genetics/*history ; USSR ; Ukraine ; United States ; World War II ; },
abstract = {This article traces disagreements about the genetic effects of low-dose radiation exposure as waged by James Neel (1915-2000), a central figure in radiation studies of Japanese populations after World War II, and Yuri Dubrova (1955-), who analyzed the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident. In a 1996 article in Nature, Dubrova reported a statistically significant increase in the minisatellite (junk) DNA mutation rate in the children of parents who received a high dose of radiation from the Chernobyl accident, contradicting studies that found no significant inherited genetic effects among offspring of Japanese A-bomb survivors. Neel's subsequent defense of his large-scale longitudinal studies of the genetic effects of ionizing radiation consolidated current scientific understandings of low-dose ionizing radiation. The article seeks to explain how the Hiroshima/Nagasaki data remain hegemonic in radiation studies, contextualizing the debate with attention to the perceived inferiority of Soviet genetic science during the Cold War.},
}
@article {pmid24998339,
year = {2014},
author = {Santesmases, MJ},
title = {The human autonomous karyotype and the origins of prenatal testing: children, pregnant women and early Down's syndrome cytogenetics, Madrid 1962-1975.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {47 Pt A},
number = {},
pages = {142-153},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.014},
pmid = {24998339},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Amniocentesis/*history ; Child ; *Chromosome Aberrations ; Cytogenetics/*history ; Down Syndrome/*history ; Female ; Genetic Testing/*history ; Genetics, Population/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; *Karyotype ; Karyotyping/*history ; Pregnancy ; Pregnant Women ; Spain ; },
abstract = {Through their ability to reveal and record abnormal chromosomes, whether inherited or accidentally altered, chromosomal studies, known as karyotyping, became the basis upon which medical genetics was constructed. The techniques involved became the visual evidence that confirmed a medical examination and were configured as a material culture for redefining health and disease, or the normal and the abnormal, in cytological terms. I will show that the study of foetal cells obtained by amniocentesis led to the stabilisation of karyotyping in its own right, while also keeping pregnant women under the vigilant medical eye. In the absence of any other examination, prenatal diagnosis by foetal karyotyping became autonomous from the foetal body. Although medical cytogenetics was practiced on an individual basis, data collected about patients over time contributed to the construction of population figures regarding birth defects. I study this complex trajectory by focussing on a Unit for Cytogenetics created in 1962 at the Clínica de la Concepción in Madrid. I incorporate the work and training of the clinicians who created the unit, and worked there as well as at other units in the large new hospitals of the national health care system built in Madrid during the mid-1960s and early 1970s.},
}
@article {pmid24983119,
year = {2014},
author = {Holloman, B},
title = {Robin Holliday 1932-2014.},
journal = {Molecular cell},
volume = {54},
number = {4},
pages = {539-541},
pmid = {24983119},
issn = {1097-4164},
mesh = {Aging ; *DNA, Cruciform ; Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Homologous Recombination ; United Kingdom ; },
}
@article {pmid24983099,
year = {2014},
author = {Holloman, B},
title = {Robin Holliday: 1932–2014.},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {157},
number = {5},
pages = {1001-1003},
pmid = {24983099},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {*Aging ; Australia ; DNA, Cruciform/history ; England ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Recombination, Genetic ; },
}
@article {pmid24982176,
year = {2014},
author = {Viegas, J},
title = {Profile of Jorge Dubcovsky.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {111},
number = {28},
pages = {10027-10028},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1410244111},
pmid = {24982176},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Portraits as Topic ; Triticum/*genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid24968964,
year = {2014},
author = {Löwy, I},
title = {How genetics came to the unborn: 1960-2000.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {47 Pt A},
number = {},
pages = {154-162},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.015},
pmid = {24968964},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Congenital Abnormalities/genetics/*history ; Cytogenetics/history ; Down Syndrome/history ; Female ; Genetic Testing/*history ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Pregnancy ; Prenatal Diagnosis/*history ; },
abstract = {Prenatal diagnosis (PND) is frequently identified with genetic testing. The termination of pregnancy for foetal malformation was called 'genetic abortion', in spite of the fact that in many cases the malformation does not result from changes in the genetic material of the cell. This study argues that the 'geneticization' of PND reflected the transformation of the meaning of the term 'genetics' in the 1960s and 70s. Such transformation was linked with the definition of Down syndrome as a genetic condition, and to the key role of search for this condition in the transformation of PND into a routine approach. The identification of PND with the polysemic term 'genetics' was also favoured by hopes that cytogenetic studies will lead to cures or prevention of common birth defects, the association of genetic counsellors with prenatal diagnosis, and the raising prestige of clinical genetics. In spite of the impressive achievements of the latter specialty, more than fifty years after the first prenatal diagnoses, the main 'cure' of a severe foetal malformation remains the same as it was in the 1960s: the termination of a pregnancy. The identification of PND with genetics deflects attention from the gap between scientists' capacity to elucidate the causes of numerous birth defects and their ability (as for now) to prevent or treat these defects, and favours the maintenance of a powerful regimen of hope.},
}
@article {pmid24962561,
year = {2014},
author = {Ziegler, A and König, IR},
title = {Celebrating the 30th anniversary of genetic epidemiology: how to define our scope?.},
journal = {Genetic epidemiology},
volume = {38},
number = {5},
pages = {379-380},
doi = {10.1002/gepi.21816},
pmid = {24962561},
issn = {1098-2272},
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; *Epidemiologic Studies ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Epidemiology/history/*trends ; Periodicals as Topic/history/*trends ; Phenotype ; Precision Medicine ; *Terminology as Topic ; },
abstract = {We review the scope of the scientific discipline genetic epidemiology by considering the steps of genetic epidemiologic research. Starting from the classical definition of genetic epidemiology as provided by Morton and Chung [1978, ISBN-13: 9780125080507], we propose a slightly modernized definition of the term genetic epidemiology.},
}
@article {pmid24958925,
year = {2014},
author = {Ramsey, J and Ramsey, TS},
title = {Ecological studies of polyploidy in the 100 years following its discovery.},
journal = {Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences},
volume = {369},
number = {1648},
pages = {},
doi = {10.1098/rstb.2013.0352},
pmid = {24958925},
issn = {1471-2970},
mesh = {*Ecosystem ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Plant Dispersal/*genetics ; Plants/*genetics ; *Polyploidy ; },
abstract = {Polyploidy is a mutation with profound phenotypic consequences and thus hypothesized to have transformative effects in plant ecology. This is most often considered in the context of geographical and environmental distributions-as achieved from divergence of physiological and life-history traits-but may also include species interactions and biological invasion. This paper presents a historical overview of hypotheses and empirical data regarding the ecology of polyploids. Early researchers of polyploidy (1910 s-1930 s) were geneticists by training but nonetheless savvy to its phenotypic effects, and speculated on the importance of genome duplication to adaptation and crop improvement. Cytogenetic studies in the 1930 s-1950 s indicated that polyploids are larger (sturdier foliage, thicker stems and taller stature) than diploids while cytogeographic surveys suggested that polyploids and diploids have allopatric or parapatric distributions. Although autopolyploidy was initially regarded as common, influential writings by North American botanists in the 1940 s and 1950 s argued for the principle role of allopolyploidy; according to this view, genome duplication was significant for providing a broader canvas for hybridization rather than for its phenotypic effects per se. The emphasis on allopolyploidy had a chilling effect on nascent ecological work, in part due to taxonomic challenges posed by interspecific hybridization. Nonetheless, biosystematic efforts over the next few decades (1950s-1970s) laid the foundation for ecological research by documenting cytotype distributions and identifying phenotypic correlates of polyploidy. Rigorous investigation of polyploid ecology was achieved in the 1980s and 1990 s by population biologists who leveraged flow cytometry for comparative work in autopolyploid complexes. These efforts revealed multi-faceted ecological and phenotypic differences, some of which may be direct consequences of genome duplication. Several classical hypotheses about the ecology of polyploids remain untested, however, and allopolyploidy--regarded by most botanists as the primary mode of genome duplication--is largely unstudied in an ecological context.},
}
@article {pmid24958859,
year = {2014},
author = {Novick, PJ},
title = {A pathway of a hundred genes starts with a single mutant: isolation of sec1-1.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {111},
number = {25},
pages = {9019-9020},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1404892111},
pmid = {24958859},
issn = {1091-6490},
support = {R01 GM035370/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; R01 GM082861/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/history ; Munc18 Proteins/*genetics/history/ultrastructure ; Saccharomyces cerevisiae/*genetics ; Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/*genetics/history/ultrastructure ; },
}
@article {pmid24954363,
year = {2014},
author = {de Chadarevian, S},
title = {Chromosome surveys of human populations: between epidemiology and anthropology.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {47 Pt A},
number = {},
pages = {87-96},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.009},
pmid = {24954363},
issn = {1879-2499},
support = {099392/Z/12/Z//Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Anthropology/history ; *Chromosomes ; Data Collection/history ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Heredity ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Population Groups/*genetics ; Research/*history ; },
abstract = {It is commonly held that after 1945 human genetics turned medical and focussed on the individual rather than on the study of human populations that had become discredited. However, a closer look at the research practices at the time quickly reveals that human population studies, using old and new tools, prospered in this period. The essay focuses on the rise of chromosome analysis as a new tool for the study of human populations. It reviews a broad array of population studies ranging from newborn screening programmes to studies of isolated or 'primitive' people. Throughout, it highlights the continuing role of concerns and opportunities raised by the propagation of atomic energy for civilian and military uses, the collection of large data bases and computers, and the role of international organisations like the World Health Organisation and the International Biological Programme in shaping research agendas and carving out a space for human heredity in the postwar era.},
}
@article {pmid24954362,
year = {2014},
author = {Lindee, S},
title = {Scaling up: human genetics as a Cold War network.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {47 Pt A},
number = {},
pages = {185-190},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.018},
pmid = {24954362},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {*Continental Population Groups ; *Data Collection ; *Genetics, Medical/history ; *Genetics, Population/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Public Health ; *Research ; Warfare ; },
abstract = {In this commentary I explore how the papers here illuminate the processes of collection that have been so central to the history of human genetics since 1945. The development of human population genetics in the Cold War period produced databases and biobanks that have endured into the present, and that continue to be used and debated. In the decades after the bomb, scientists collected and transferred human biological materials and information from populations of interest, and as they moved these biological resources or biosocial resources acquired new meanings and uses. The papers here collate these practices and map their desires and ironies. They explore how a large international network of geneticists, biological anthropologists, virologists and other physicians and scientists interacted with local informants, research subjects and public officials. They also track the networks and standards that mobilized the transfer of information, genealogies, tissue and blood samples. As Joanna Radin suggests here, the massive collections of human biological materials and data were often understood to be resources for an "as-yet-unknown" future. The stories told here contain elements of surveillance, extraction, salvage and eschatology.},
}
@article {pmid24954151,
year = {2014},
author = {de Souza, VS and Santos, RV},
title = {The emergence of human population genetics and narratives about the formation of the Brazilian nation (1950-1960).},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {47 Pt A},
number = {},
pages = {97-107},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.010},
pmid = {24954151},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Brazil ; Continental Population Groups/*history ; *Genetic Variation ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Research/*history ; Science/history ; Social Change/history ; World War II ; },
abstract = {This paper discusses the emergence of human population genetics in Brazil in the decades following World War II, and pays particular attention to narratives about the formation of the Brazilian nation. We analyze the institutionalization of this branch of genetics in the 1950s and 1960s, and look at research on the characteristics of the population of Brazil, which made use of new explanatory models of evolutionary dynamics. These developments were greatly influenced by the activities of the Rockefeller Foundation and by the presence of North American geneticists in Brazil, especially Theodosius Dobzhansky. One of the main points of this paper is to show that explanations of Brazilian human genetic diversity constructed in the mid-twentieth century closely followed interpretations that had been produced since the end of the nineteenth century, in which notions of 'racial mixing' played a central role. Even as population genetics was conditioned by nationalist concerns that had long marked Brazilian history, we argue that its emergence and institutionalization was closely associated with global, post-World War II socio-political contexts, especially with regards to modernization projects and growing scientific internationalization.},
}
@article {pmid24947269,
year = {2014},
author = {Bauer, S},
title = {Mutations in Soviet public health science: post-Lysenko medical genetics, 1969-1991.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {47 Pt A},
number = {},
pages = {163-172},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.05.016},
pmid = {24947269},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Academies and Institutes/*history ; Environmental Monitoring ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; Genetics, Population/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Mutagens ; *Mutation ; Public Health/*history ; Research/*history ; USSR ; Warfare ; },
abstract = {This paper traces the integration of human genetics with Soviet public health science after the Lysenko era. For nearly three decades, USSR biology pursued its own version of anti-bourgeois, Soviet 'creative Darwinism', departing from western, post-WWII scientific developments. After Lysenko was suspended, research niches of immunology, biophysics and mutation research formed the basis of new departments at the Institute of Medical Genetics, which was founded in 1969 as part of the Soviet Academy of Medical Sciences. Focussing on early research activities and collaborations at the institute, I show how the concept of mutagenesis, a pivotal issue during the Cold War, became mobilized from Drosophila genetics to human heredity and to society as a whole. This mode of scaling up and down through population studies shaped not only Soviet human biology and genetics; it also brought about changes in clinical practice and public health as well as in the monitoring and regulation of mutagenic agents in the environment.},
}
@article {pmid24941737,
year = {2014},
author = {Bangham, J},
title = {Writing, printing, speaking: Rhesus blood-group genetics and nomenclatures in the mid-twentieth century.},
journal = {British journal for the history of science},
volume = {47},
number = {173 Pt 2},
pages = {335-361},
pmid = {24941737},
issn = {0007-0874},
mesh = {Animals ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Rh-Hr Blood-Group System/classification/*genetics/*history ; *Terminology as Topic ; United Kingdom ; United States ; },
abstract = {In the 1940s and 1950s, British and American journals published a flood of papers by doctors, pathologists, geneticists and anthropologists debating the virtues of two competing nomenclatures used to denote the Rhesus blood groups. Accounts of this prolonged and often bitter episode have tended to focus on the main protagonists' personalities and theoretical commitments. Here I take a different approach and use the literature generated by the dispute to recover the practical and epistemic functions of nomenclatures in genetics. Drawing on recent work that views inscriptions as part of the material culture of science, I use the Rhesus controversy to think about the ways in which geneticists visualized and negotiated their objects of research, and how they communicated and collaborated with workers in other settings. Extending recent studies of relations between different media, I consider the material forms of nomenclatures, as they were jotted in notebooks, printed in journals, scribbled on blackboards and spoken out loud. The competing Rhesus nomenclatures had different virtues as they were expressed in different media and made to embody commitments to laboratory practices. In exploring the varied practical and epistemic qualities of nomenclatures I also suggest a new understanding of the Rhesus controversy itself.},
}
@article {pmid24941735,
year = {2014},
author = {Peterson, E},
title = {The conquest of vitalism or the eclipse of organicism? The 1930s Cambridge organizer project and the social network of mid-twentieth-century biology.},
journal = {British journal for the history of science},
volume = {47},
number = {173 Pt 2},
pages = {281-304},
pmid = {24941735},
issn = {0007-0874},
mesh = {Biology/*history ; England ; Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; *Social Support ; Vitalism/*history ; },
abstract = {In the 1930s, two concepts excited the European biological community: the organizer phenomenon and organicism. This essay examines the history of and connection between these two phenomena in order to address the conventional 'rise-and-fall' narrative that historians have assigned to each. Scholars promoted the 'rise-and-fall' narrative in connection with a broader account of the devitalizing of biology through the twentieth century. I argue that while limited evidence exists for the 'fall of the organizer concept' by the 1950s, the organicism that often motivated the organizer work had no concomitant fall--even during the mid-century heyday of molecular biology. My argument is based on an examination of shifting social networks of life scientists from the 1920s to the 1970s, many of whom attended or corresponded with members of the Cambridge Theoretical Biology Club (1932-1938). I conclude that the status and cohesion of these social networks at the micro scale was at least as important as macro-scale conceptual factors in determining the relative persuasiveness of organicist philosophy.},
}
@article {pmid24940588,
year = {2014},
author = {Hayflick, L},
title = {Robin Holliday (1932–2014).},
journal = {Biogerontology},
volume = {15},
number = {3},
pages = {213-215},
pmid = {24940588},
issn = {1573-6768},
mesh = {*Aging ; Australia ; Cell Biology/*history ; Geriatrics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid24932353,
year = {2014},
author = {Roberts, R},
title = {Dr. Robert Roberts oversees special issue on genomic medicine for the Methodist DeBakey Cardiovascular Journal.},
journal = {Methodist DeBakey cardiovascular journal},
volume = {10},
number = {1},
pages = {1},
pmid = {24932353},
issn = {1947-6108},
mesh = {Biomedical Research/*history ; Cardiovascular Diseases/genetics/*history ; Genetic Predisposition to Disease ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Risk Factors ; },
}
@article {pmid24915693,
year = {2014},
author = {Romeo Casabona, CM},
title = {[The construction of the law applicable to human genetics and biotechnology over the past two decades].},
journal = {Revista de derecho y genoma humano = Law and the human genome review},
volume = {Spec No},
number = {},
pages = {27-52},
pmid = {24915693},
issn = {1134-7198},
mesh = {Biotechnology/*history/*legislation & jurisprudence ; Genetics, Medical/*history/*legislation & jurisprudence ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid24912161,
year = {2014},
author = {Azar, B},
title = {Profile of Bruce Levin.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {111},
number = {23},
pages = {8316-8318},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1408161111},
pmid = {24912161},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology ; Computer Simulation ; Directed Molecular Evolution/methods ; Drug Resistance, Bacterial ; Escherichia coli/drug effects/*genetics ; *Evolution, Molecular ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Models, Theoretical ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24905591,
year = {2014},
author = {Nicolas, JF},
title = {François Jacob, or the thirst for novelty.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {370-374},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.014},
pmid = {24905591},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Animals ; Cell Biology/*history/trends ; Cytogenetics/*history/trends ; Drosophila ; Embryonic Stem Cells/physiology ; History, 20th Century ; Mice ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; },
abstract = {François Jacob tackled embryonic development from 1972 onwards, in the "Génétique cellulaire" Unit of the Molecular Biology Department at the Pasteur Institute, taking as models teratocarcinoma and the early stages of mouse embryo development. Studies on teratocarcinoma provided no major information about developmental processes, but they were the essential step without which embryonic stem cells (ES, iPS) would probably not have been discovered. The mechanisms of development were revealed by genetic approaches coupled to molecular biology, but with the Drosophila model rather than the mouse embryo. Since these studies, it has been revealed that developmental mechanisms among animals have proven to be universal. None of these results were predicted in 1972.},
}
@article {pmid24896809,
year = {2014},
author = {Jeggo, P and Gounari, F},
title = {Robin Holliday 1932-2014.},
journal = {Nature structural & molecular biology},
volume = {21},
number = {6},
pages = {501-502},
doi = {10.1038/nsmb.2835},
pmid = {24896809},
issn = {1545-9985},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Homologous Recombination ; United Kingdom ; },
}
@article {pmid24882823,
year = {2014},
author = {Roll-Hansen, N},
title = {The holist tradition in twentieth century genetics. Wilhelm Johannsen's genotype concept.},
journal = {The Journal of physiology},
volume = {592},
number = {11},
pages = {2431-2438},
doi = {10.1113/jphysiol.2014.272120},
pmid = {24882823},
issn = {1469-7793},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biological Evolution ; Chromosomes/*genetics ; Genes, Plant ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
abstract = {The terms 'genotype', 'phenotype' and 'gene' originally had a different meaning from that in the Modern Synthesis. These terms were coined in the first decade of the twentieth century by the Danish plant physiologist Wilhelm Johannsen. His bean selection experiment and his theoretical analysis of the difference between genotype and phenotype were important inputs to the formation of genetics as a well-defined special discipline. This paper shows how Johannsen's holistic genotype theory provided a platform for criticism of narrowly genocentric versions of the chromosome theory of heredity that came to dominate genetics in the middle decades of the twentieth century. Johannsen came to recognize the epoch-making importance of the work done by the Drosophila group, but he continued to insist on the incompleteness of the chromosome theory. Genes of the kind that they mapped on the chromosomes could only give a partial explanation of biological heredity and evolution.},
}
@article {pmid24878280,
year = {2014},
author = {Miller, JH},
title = {"There were giants in the earth in those days." Genesis 6:4.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {359-361},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.016},
pmid = {24878280},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24873987,
year = {2014},
author = {Davies, J},
title = {"A ce moment-là".},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {351-352},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.006},
pmid = {24873987},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24870391,
year = {2014},
author = {Fellous, M},
title = {Boy or girl's mendelian genetics with "precious" families.},
journal = {Journal of molecular neuroscience : MN},
volume = {54},
number = {3},
pages = {586-589},
doi = {10.1007/s12031-014-0333-4},
pmid = {24870391},
issn = {1559-1166},
mesh = {Adult ; Child ; Female ; *Genes, sry ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Male ; Ovotesticular Disorders of Sex Development/diagnosis/*genetics ; *Pedigree ; },
}
@article {pmid24864334,
year = {2014},
author = {},
title = {Special issue dedicated to Sir David Alan Hopwood.},
journal = {Journal of industrial microbiology & biotechnology},
volume = {41},
number = {2},
pages = {173-477},
pmid = {24864334},
issn = {1476-5535},
mesh = {Biological Products/history ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Streptomyces/genetics ; United Kingdom ; },
}
@article {pmid24861002,
year = {2014},
author = {Kaiser, AD},
title = {Learning about prophages from François Jacob.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {335-337},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.010},
pmid = {24861002},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Gene Expression Regulation, Viral ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; Prophages/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid24859464,
year = {2014},
author = {Fellous, M and Fellous, A},
title = {François le "commandeur".},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {388-390},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.008},
pmid = {24859464},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Cell Biology/*history/trends ; Cytogenetics/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid24859146,
year = {2014},
author = {Cohen, GN},
title = {Souvenirs.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {325-326},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.018},
pmid = {24859146},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24859143,
year = {2014},
author = {Ullmann, A},
title = {Le "grand" François.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {327-330},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.017},
pmid = {24859143},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24859142,
year = {2014},
author = {Signer, E},
title = {Through postdoc eyes.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {346-347},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.029},
pmid = {24859142},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24859141,
year = {2014},
author = {Yaniv, M},
title = {With François Jacob, from temperature sensitive mutants of Escherichia coli to mouse development and diseases.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {367-369},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.026},
pmid = {24859141},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Animals ; Cell Biology/*history/trends ; Escherichia coli/genetics ; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Mice ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24859140,
year = {2014},
author = {Cohn, M},
title = {The Institut Pasteur attic dwellers: their origins, their paths to discovery.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {318-324},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.027},
pmid = {24859140},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
abstract = {Although this volume is dedicated to honoring François Jacob, I would like my contribution to broaden the context by recalling the background within which the scientists of those times operated. The specific scientific accomplishments of Jacob will certainly be covered by the other contributors who collaborated with him. My handful of recollections presented here largely as vignettes is intended to give the reader a feeling for the elements, many social, that shaped the generation of scientists that included such central figures, Jacob, Lwoff, Monod. It is the tale of a generation trying to express its creativity in a world caught up in war, irrational values and unforgivable inhumanity. Even this limited account is a great story bringing us important lessons for thought.},
}
@article {pmid24859139,
year = {2014},
author = {Gros, F},
title = {Memories of François Jacob: the inspirer and the friend.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {331-332},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.022},
pmid = {24859139},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24859138,
year = {2014},
author = {Pereira da Silva, LH},
title = {One day in François Jacob's laboratory.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {343-345},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.025},
pmid = {24859138},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Bacteriophage lambda ; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Gene Expression Regulation, Viral ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Lysogeny ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24859136,
year = {2014},
author = {Campbell, A},
title = {Recollections of François Jacob.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {338-339},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.028},
pmid = {24859136},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Bacteriophages/genetics ; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Gene Expression Regulation, Viral ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24859135,
year = {2014},
author = {Reznikoff, WS},
title = {Viewing Francois Jacob (and Jacques Monod) through AGC & T.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {357-358},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.024},
pmid = {24859135},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Sequence Analysis, DNA ; },
}
@article {pmid24859134,
year = {2014},
author = {Beckwith, J},
title = {Mission possible: getting to yes with François Jacob.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {348-350},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.015},
pmid = {24859134},
issn = {1769-7123},
support = {R01 GM041883/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24859133,
year = {2014},
author = {Schwartz, M},
title = {A geneticist in the attic.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {353-356},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.021},
pmid = {24859133},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24858939,
year = {2014},
author = {Fsihi, H},
title = {François Jacob: the Mensch behind the scientist.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {311-312},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.005},
pmid = {24858939},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {France ; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24853972,
year = {2014},
author = {Siminovitch, L},
title = {My friend, François Jacob, an icon among icons.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {316-317},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.023},
pmid = {24853972},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24853971,
year = {2014},
author = {Dove, W and Shedlovsky, A},
title = {François Jacob--the rest of the story.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {362-364},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.013},
pmid = {24853971},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Cell Biology/*history/trends ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; },
}
@article {pmid24853970,
year = {2014},
author = {Meselson, M},
title = {François and "X".},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {313-315},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.004},
pmid = {24853970},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24853969,
year = {2014},
author = {Guénet, JL},
title = {François Jacob, …. an outstanding mentor!.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {377-379},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.002},
pmid = {24853969},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Animals ; Cell Biology/*history/trends ; Cytogenetics/*history/trends ; Embryology/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Mice ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; },
}
@article {pmid24853968,
year = {2014},
author = {Louvard, D},
title = {My move from EMBL to Institut Pasteur, a tribute to François Jacob.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {383-385},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.020},
pmid = {24853968},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Cell Biology/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; },
}
@article {pmid24853967,
year = {2014},
author = {Eisen, H},
title = {LE PATRON: reminiscences of life with François Jacob.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {340-342},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.011},
pmid = {24853967},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Cell Biology/*history/trends ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; },
}
@article {pmid24853966,
year = {2014},
author = {Kellermann, O},
title = {Lineage stem cell lines: test tubes to build pathophysiological scenarios and discover therapeutic targets.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {380-382},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.003},
pmid = {24853966},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Cell Differentiation ; Cytogenetics/*history/*methods/trends ; Embryonic Stem Cells/*drug effects/*physiology ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Stem Cell Research/*history ; Therapeutics ; },
}
@article {pmid24853965,
year = {2014},
author = {Cuzin, F},
title = {François Jacob at the cutting edge.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {365-366},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.009},
pmid = {24853965},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24853964,
year = {2014},
author = {Thomas, R},
title = {Merci François Jacob.},
journal = {Research in microbiology},
volume = {165},
number = {5},
pages = {333-334},
doi = {10.1016/j.resmic.2014.05.012},
pmid = {24853964},
issn = {1769-7123},
mesh = {Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics, Microbial/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid24853264,
year = {2014},
author = {Fogg, CN and Kovats, DE},
title = {2014 ISCB Accomplishment by a Senior Scientist Award: Gene Myers.},
journal = {PLoS computational biology},
volume = {10},
number = {5},
pages = {e1003621},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003621},
pmid = {24853264},
issn = {1553-7358},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Germany ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Societies/*history ; Systems Biology/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24850150,
year = {2014},
author = {Arthur, W},
title = {Obituary: Bryan Clarke.},
journal = {Evolution & development},
volume = {16},
number = {3},
pages = {181},
doi = {10.1111/ede.12079},
pmid = {24850150},
issn = {1525-142X},
mesh = {Animals ; Biological Evolution ; England ; Gastropoda/classification/genetics ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; *Periodicals as Topic ; },
}
@article {pmid24840850,
year = {2014},
author = {Portin, P},
title = {The birth and development of the DNA theory of inheritance: sixty years since the discovery of the structure of DNA.},
journal = {Journal of genetics},
volume = {93},
number = {1},
pages = {293-302},
pmid = {24840850},
issn = {0973-7731},
mesh = {DNA/chemistry/*genetics/history ; Heredity/*genetics ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/history ; Nucleic Acid Conformation ; Research/history ; },
abstract = {The development of the DNA theory of inheritance culminated in the publication of the molecular structure of DNA 60 years ago. This paper describes this development, beginning with the discovery of DNA as a chemical substance by Friedrich Miescher in 1869, followed by its basic chemical analysis and demonstration of its participation in the structure of chromosomes. Subsequently it was discovered by Oswald Avery in 1944 that DNA was the genetic material, and then Erwin Chargaff showed that the proportions of the bases included in the structure of DNA followed a certain law. These findings, in association with the biophysical studies of Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin with Raymond Gosling, led James Watson and Francis Crick to the discovery of the double-helical structure of DNA in 1953. The paper ends with a short description of the development of the DNA theory of inheritance after the discovery of the double helix.},
}
@article {pmid24835449,
year = {2014},
author = {Farnetani, F and Farnetani, I},
title = {[Giuseppe Roberto Burgio (1919-2014)].},
journal = {Minerva pediatrica},
volume = {66},
number = {2},
pages = {151-160},
pmid = {24835449},
issn = {0026-4946},
mesh = {Anemia/history ; Bone Marrow Transplantation/history ; Faculty, Medical/*history ; Famous Persons ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Immunogenetics/history ; Italy ; *Leadership ; Manuals as Topic ; Pediatrics/education/*history ; Schools, Medical/*history ; Sicily ; Universities/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid24827033,
year = {2014},
author = {Jou, C},
title = {The biology and genetics of obesity--a century of inquiries.},
journal = {The New England journal of medicine},
volume = {370},
number = {20},
pages = {1874-1877},
doi = {10.1056/NEJMp1400613},
pmid = {24827033},
issn = {1533-4406},
mesh = {Biomedical Research/history ; Energy Intake/physiology ; Genetic Predisposition to Disease/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Obesity/genetics/*history/metabolism ; Twin Studies as Topic/history ; },
}
@article {pmid24824401,
year = {2014},
author = {Jones, S},
title = {Bryan Clarke.},
journal = {Heredity},
volume = {112},
number = {6},
pages = {569-570},
doi = {10.1038/hdy.2014.50},
pmid = {24824401},
issn = {1365-2540},
mesh = {England ; *Genetics/history ; History, 19th Century ; },
}
@article {pmid24816433,
year = {2014},
author = {Maes, HH and Hatemi, PK and Neale, MC},
title = {Lindon J. Eaves, Ph.D., M.A. (Oxon), D.Sc. Theory-model-data.},
journal = {Behavior genetics},
volume = {44},
number = {3},
pages = {183-192},
doi = {10.1007/s10519-014-9655-9},
pmid = {24816433},
issn = {1573-3297},
support = {R01 DA024413/DA/NIDA NIH HHS/United States ; R25 MH019918/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United States ; U01 DA024413/DA/NIDA NIH HHS/United States ; DA025109/DA/NIDA NIH HHS/United States ; R37 DA018673/DA/NIDA NIH HHS/United States ; R01 DA025109/DA/NIDA NIH HHS/United States ; R01 DA018673/DA/NIDA NIH HHS/United States ; MH019918/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Adolescent ; Adolescent Behavior/history ; Genetic Association Studies/*history ; Genetics, Behavioral/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Twin Studies as Topic/*history ; United States ; },
abstract = {We begin this special issue by providing a glimpse into the career of Dr. Lindon J. Eaves, from the perspectives of a student, postdoc, instructor, assistant to associate and full professor over the last 20 odd years. We focus primarily on Lindon's contributions to methodological issues and research designs to address them, in particular those related to models for extended twin-family designs, for the development of adolescent behavior, for genotype-environment covariation and interaction, and their application to the Virginia 30,000 and the Virginia Twin Study of Adolescent Behavioral Development. We then introduce the collection of papers in this special festschrift issue of Behavior Genetics, celebrating Dr. Eaves achievements over the last 40 years.},
}
@article {pmid24812699,
year = {2014},
author = {Roe, BA},
title = {Frederick Sanger (1918–2013).},
journal = {Genome research},
volume = {24},
number = {4},
pages = {xi-xii},
pmid = {24812699},
issn = {1549-5469},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid24811736,
year = {2014},
author = {Stoltzfus, A and Cable, K},
title = {Mendelian-mutationism: the forgotten evolutionary synthesis.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {47},
number = {4},
pages = {501-546},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-014-9383-2},
pmid = {24811736},
issn = {0022-5010},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; *Mutation ; *Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {According to a classical narrative, early geneticists, failing to see how Mendelism provides the missing pieces of Darwin's theory, rejected gradual changes and advocated an implausible yet briefly popular view of evolution-by-mutation; after decades of delay (in which synthesis was prevented by personal conflicts, disciplinary rivalries, and anti-Darwinian animus), Darwinism emerged on a new Mendelian basis. Based on the works of four influential early geneticists - Bateson, de Vries, Morgan and Punnett -, and drawing on recent scholarship, we offer an alternative that turns the classical view on its head. For early geneticists, embracing discrete inheritance and the mutation theory (for the origin of hereditary variation) did not entail rejection of selection, but rejection of Darwin's non-Mendelian views of heredity and variation, his doctrine of naturanon facitsaltum, and his conception of "natural selection" as a creative force that shapes features out of masses of infinitesimal differences. We find no evidence of a delay in synthesizing mutation, rules of discrete inheritance, and selection in a Mendelian-Mutationist Synthesis. Instead, before 1918, early geneticists had conceptualized allelic selection, the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, the evolution of a quantitative trait under selection, the probability of fixation of a new mutation, and other key innovations. Contemporary evolutionary thinking seems closer to their more ecumenical view than to the restrictive mid-twentieth-century consensus known as the Modern Synthesis.},
}
@article {pmid24803228,
year = {2014},
author = {Porter, TM},
title = {The curious case of blending inheritance.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {46},
number = {},
pages = {125-132},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.02.003},
pmid = {24803228},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Biometry/*history ; Genetics/*history ; *Heredity ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; },
abstract = {For more than a century, geneticists have consistently identified the origins of their science with Gregor Mendel's experiments on peas. Mendelism, they have said, demonstrated at long last that biological inheritance was not, as had so often been supposed, "blending," but particulate. Many historians of biology continue to interpret the conflict of biometricians and Mendelians at the start of the twentieth century in these terms, identifying biometry with the (incorrect) blending mechanism. But this view of blending is history as war by other means. While Francis Galton's contrast between blended and alternate inheritance had become familiar by 1905, he and his interpreters understood the two forms as differing outcomes of breeding, not as rival theories. Only a few biologists in this period went beyond blending as a description of results of breeding to a blending mechanism, and these were not biometricians. Recognizing this, we can see also that statistical methods and models were central to evolutionary genetics right from the start. The evolutionary synthesis, while reshaping their role, did not create it.},
}
@article {pmid24801698,
year = {2014},
author = {Grütter, MG},
title = {Biocrystallography in Switzerland: achievements and future perspectives.},
journal = {Chimia},
volume = {68},
number = {1-2},
pages = {54-59},
doi = {10.2533/chimia.2014.54},
pmid = {24801698},
issn = {0009-4293},
mesh = {Biochemistry/history/*methods ; Crystallography/history/*methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Models, Molecular ; Molecular Biology/history/methods ; Protein Conformation ; Proteins/*chemistry ; Switzerland ; },
abstract = {The first protein crystallography group in Switzerland was installed at the Biozentrum of the University of Basel approximately 40 years ago. Since then protein crystallography has grown and matured remarkably and is now established in the molecular biology, biochemistry or biological medicine departments of most major Swiss Universities as well as in the pharmaceutical industry and in biotech startup companies. Swiss X-ray biocrystallography groups have made remarkable contributions from the beginning and have brought Switzerland to the forefront in biostructural research during the last 5 to 10 years. Switzerland has now a leading position in the areas of supramolecular complexes, membrane proteins and structure-based drug design in pharmaceutical and biotech industries. Protein crystallography on the outer membrane protein ompF as well as the development of the lipidic cubic phase crystallization methodology has been pioneered at the Biozentrum. The latter found its somewhat late recognition through the recent explosion in structure determinations of the seven transmembrane helix G-coupled receptors. Highlights from Swiss structural biology groups in the field of supramolecular complexes include the structures of ribosomal particles, of the nucleosome and the pilus assembly complex of uropathogenic E. coli. On the membrane protein side advances in the field of ABC transporters and ion channels are world-recognized achievements of Swiss structural biology. Dedicated laboratories at many academic and industrial institutions, their current research programs, the availability of excellent infrastructure and the continuing efforts to build new facilities such as the SwissFEL indicate an even brighter future for structural biology in Switzerland.},
}
@article {pmid24795993,
year = {2014},
author = {Zeleznik-Le, NJ and Testa, JR},
title = {In memoriam: Janet D. Rowley, MD (April 5, 1925-December 17, 2013).},
journal = {Cancer genetics},
volume = {207},
number = {1-2},
pages = {46-47},
pmid = {24795993},
issn = {2210-7762},
mesh = {Chicago ; Chromosome Aberrations ; Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Leukemia/*genetics ; Oncogenes ; },
}
@article {pmid24794131,
year = {2014},
author = {Mosher, RA},
title = {Interview with Rebecca A. Mosher.},
journal = {Trends in plant science},
volume = {19},
number = {7},
pages = {409-410},
doi = {10.1016/j.tplants.2014.04.002},
pmid = {24794131},
issn = {1878-4372},
mesh = {Animals ; Botany/*history ; Epigenesis, Genetic ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Hunger ; Malnutrition/prevention & control ; Molecular Biology/history ; Plants/*genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid24794128,
year = {2014},
author = {Dangl, JL},
title = {Interview with Jeffrey L. Dangl.},
journal = {Trends in plant science},
volume = {19},
number = {6},
pages = {342-343},
doi = {10.1016/j.tplants.2014.04.003},
pmid = {24794128},
issn = {1878-4372},
mesh = {Botany/*history ; California ; Germany ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; North Carolina ; },
}
@article {pmid24787998,
year = {2014},
author = {Zehender, G and Ebranati, E and Lai, A and Luzzago, C and Paladini, S and Tagliacarne, C and Galli, C and Galli, M and Ciccozzi, M and Zanetti, AR and Romanò, L},
title = {Phylogeography and phylodynamics of European genotype 3 hepatitis E virus.},
journal = {Infection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases},
volume = {25},
number = {},
pages = {138-143},
doi = {10.1016/j.meegid.2014.04.016},
pmid = {24787998},
issn = {1567-7257},
mesh = {Animals ; Bayes Theorem ; Europe ; Evolution, Molecular ; Genes, Viral ; Genotype ; Hepatitis E/transmission/veterinary/*virology ; Hepatitis E virus/*classification/*genetics ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Phylogeography/history ; Sequence Analysis, RNA ; Swine ; Swine Diseases/epidemiology/*virology ; },
abstract = {Hepatitis E virus is classified into four genotypes that have different geographical and host distributions. The main cause of sporadic autochthonous type E acute hepatitis in developed countries is genotype 3, which has a worldwide distribution and widely infects pigs. The aim of this study was to make hypotheses concerning the origin and global dispersion routes of this genotype by reconstructing the spatial and temporal dynamics of 208 HEV genotype 3 ORF-2 sequences (retrieved from public databases) isolated in different geographical areas. The evolutionary rates, time of the most recent common ancestors (tMRCAs), epidemic growth and phylogeography of HEV-3 were co-estimated using a MCMC Bayesian method. The maximum clade credibility tree showed the existence of two distinct main clades: clade A, which consists of only European subtypes (HEV-3e and 3f), and clade B, which consists of European subtype 3c and all of the Asian subtypes (3a, 3b and 3d) sharing a common ancestor, which most probably existed in Asia in 1920s. All of the North American isolates belonged to Asian subtype 3a. On the basis of our time-scaled phylogeographical reconstruction, we hypothesise that after originating in the early 1800s in Europe, HEV reached Asia in the first decades of 1900, and then moved to America probably in the 1970s-1980s. Analysis of the skyline plot showed a sharp increase of the number of infections between the 1980s and 2005, thus suggesting the intervention of new and highly efficient routes of transmission possibly related to changes in the pig industry.},
}
@article {pmid24784159,
year = {2014},
author = {Kaback, MM},
title = {Michael Kaback: people and places.},
journal = {Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics},
volume = {16},
number = {12},
pages = {981-983},
doi = {10.1038/gim.2014.44},
pmid = {24784159},
issn = {1530-0366},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Tay-Sachs Disease/*genetics ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24784158,
year = {2015},
author = {Hall, JG},
title = {Judith G. Hall: a genetic journey.},
journal = {Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics},
volume = {17},
number = {1},
pages = {91-92},
doi = {10.1038/gim.2014.43},
pmid = {24784158},
issn = {1530-0366},
mesh = {British Columbia ; England ; *Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24779058,
year = {2014},
author = {Lander, E and Nybo, K},
title = {Scientists. Excitement for a new era.},
journal = {BioTechniques},
volume = {56},
number = {3},
pages = {107},
doi = {10.2144/000114142},
pmid = {24779058},
issn = {1940-9818},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24778217,
year = {2014},
author = {Ravindran, S},
title = {Profile of Norbert Perrimon.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {111},
number = {21},
pages = {7501-7502},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1406464111},
pmid = {24778217},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Animals ; Developmental Biology/*history ; Drosophila/*physiology ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Signal Transduction/*physiology ; },
}
@article {pmid24777854,
year = {2014},
author = {Jiang, L},
title = {Causes of aging are likely to be many: robin holliday and changing molecular approaches to cell aging, 1963-1988.},
journal = {Journal of the history of biology},
volume = {47},
number = {4},
pages = {547-584},
doi = {10.1007/s10739-014-9382-3},
pmid = {24777854},
issn = {0022-5010},
mesh = {Animals ; *Cellular Senescence ; Cytoplasm/metabolism ; Drosophila melanogaster/physiology ; Epigenesis, Genetic ; *Evolution, Molecular ; Fibroblasts/physiology ; Fungi/physiology ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Physiology/*history ; Proteins/metabolism ; United Kingdom ; },
abstract = {Causal complexities involved in biological phenomena often generate ambiguous experimental results that may create epistemic niches for new approaches and interpretations. The exploration for new approaches may foment momentum of larger epistemological shifts, and thereby introduce the possibilities of adopting new technologies. This paper describes British molecular biologist Robin Holliday's cell aging research from 1963 to the 1980s that transformed from simple hypothesis testing to working on various alternative and integrative approaches designed to deal with complex data. In the 1960s, hoping to use biochemical investigations of cells to settle a debate about whether DNA mutations or protein errors caused aging, Holliday carried out a series of experiments with fruit flies, fungi, and human fibroblast cells. The results seemed to demonstrate that cytoplasmic protein errors caused cell aging. However, other scientists obtained contradictory results and raised issues about potential flaws in Holliday's experiments. In the 1970s, working as the director of the Genetics Division of the National Institute for Medical Research in Mill Hill, United Kingdom, Holliday relied on available talents of his associates, including computational expertise, to explore alternative hypotheses and approaches. By the early 1980s, they had worked out an epigenetic explanation and had established integrative, evolutionary models of cell aging that incorporated both DNA mutations and protein errors as critical factors. By delineating Holliday's research path from simply testing hypotheses to integrating multiple factors involved in aging, this paper offers an account of the difficulties in targeting molecular cause in cell aging around the 1970s, whose failures nevertheless opened up an epistemic niche for integration.},
}
@article {pmid24772659,
year = {2014},
author = {Fando, RA},
title = {[S.G. Levit Moscow School of Medical Genetics].},
journal = {Problemy sotsial'noi gigieny, zdravookhraneniia i istorii meditsiny},
volume = {},
number = {1},
pages = {44-47},
pmid = {24772659},
issn = {0869-866X},
mesh = {Academies and Institutes/*history ; Biomedical Research/*history ; Genetics, Medical/education/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Interdisciplinary Communication ; Moscow ; Specialization ; },
abstract = {The article considers medical genetic studies carried out by S.G. Levit scientific School. The workers of the Medical biologic institute studied geographical prevalence of different forms of colorblindness, early canities and surdomutism. The hospital examination of twins was another direction of research studies of Levit School. The organization of the mentioned research was clear-cut planned. The groups of researchers were organized to study normal and pathologic characteristics. The special research program was developed. The institute permanently carried out active workshops and conferences, published scientific transactions. The consolidation of various specialists around the scientific school made it possible to resolve many inter-disciplinary problems in the field of inherent pathology.},
}
@article {pmid24763290,
year = {2014},
author = {Benkendorf, JL},
title = {Genetic legacy and the genomic future.},
journal = {Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics},
volume = {16},
number = {11},
pages = {862-863},
doi = {10.1038/gim.2014.36},
pmid = {24763290},
issn = {1530-0366},
mesh = {Genetic Counseling ; Genetics, Medical/*history/trends ; Genomics/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24756161,
year = {2014},
author = {Shiroishi, T},
title = {"Legacy of Dr. Kazuo Moriwaki" (1930-2013).},
journal = {Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society},
volume = {25},
number = {5-6},
pages = {193-194},
doi = {10.1007/s00335-014-9518-y},
pmid = {24756161},
issn = {1432-1777},
mesh = {Animals ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Japan ; Mice/classification/*genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid24749744,
year = {2014},
author = {Héon, E and Levin, A and MacDonald, IM},
title = {In memoriam Maria Musarella.},
journal = {Ophthalmic genetics},
volume = {35},
number = {3},
pages = {129},
doi = {10.3109/13816810.2014.907922},
pmid = {24749744},
issn = {1744-5094},
mesh = {Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Ophthalmology/*history ; Physicians, Women/history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24748373,
year = {2014},
author = {Johnson, BR and Klaenhammer, TR},
title = {Impact of genomics on the field of probiotic research: historical perspectives to modern paradigms.},
journal = {Antonie van Leeuwenhoek},
volume = {106},
number = {1},
pages = {141-156},
doi = {10.1007/s10482-014-0171-y},
pmid = {24748373},
issn = {1572-9699},
mesh = {Bacteria/classification/*genetics/isolation & purification/metabolism ; Biomedical Research/*history ; Canthaxanthin/history ; Genomics/history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Probiotics/chemistry/*history ; },
abstract = {For thousands of years, humans have safely consumed microorganisms through fermented foods. Many of these bacteria are considered probiotics, which act through diverse mechanisms to confer a health benefit to the host. However, it was not until the availability of whole-genome sequencing and the era of genomics that mechanisms of probiotic efficacy could be discovered. In this review, we explore the history of the probiotic concept and the current standard of integrated genomic techniques to discern the complex, beneficial relationships between probiotic microbes and their hosts.},
}
@article {pmid24747808,
year = {2014},
author = {Theunissen, B},
title = {Practical animal breeding as the key to an integrated view of genetics, eugenics and evolutionary theory: Arend L. Hagedoorn (1885-1953).},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {46},
number = {},
pages = {55-64},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.03.004},
pmid = {24747808},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Animal Husbandry/*history ; Animals ; Biological Evolution ; Breeding/*history ; Eugenics/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; },
abstract = {In the history of genetics Arend Hagedoorn (1885-1953) is mainly known for the 'Hagedoorn effect', which states that part of the changes in variability that populations undergo over time are due to chance effects. Leaving this contribution aside, Hagedoorn's work has received scarcely any attention from historians. This is mainly due to the fact that Hagedoorn was an expert in animal breeding, a field that historians have only recently begun to explore. His work provides an example of how a prominent geneticist envisaged animal breeding to be reformed by the new science of heredity. Hagedoorn, a pupil of Hugo de Vries, tried to integrate his insights as a Mendelian geneticist and an animal breeding expert in a unified view of heredity, eugenics and evolution. In this paper I aim to elucidate how these fields were connected in Hagedoorn's work.},
}
@article {pmid24746242,
year = {2014},
author = {Bennett, MJ},
title = {Interview with Malcolm J. Bennett.},
journal = {Trends in plant science},
volume = {19},
number = {5},
pages = {273-274},
doi = {10.1016/j.tplants.2014.03.007},
pmid = {24746242},
issn = {1878-4372},
mesh = {Botany/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/history ; Systems Biology/*history ; United Kingdom ; },
}
@article {pmid24735915,
year = {2014},
author = {Williams, KL and Gooley, AA and Wilkins, MR and Packer, NH},
title = {A Sydney proteome story.},
journal = {Journal of proteomics},
volume = {107},
number = {},
pages = {13-23},
doi = {10.1016/j.jprot.2014.04.006},
pmid = {24735915},
issn = {1876-7737},
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; Australia ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Proteome ; Proteomics/*history/*methods/trends ; },
abstract = {This is the story of the experience of a multidisciplinary group at Macquarie University in Sydney as we participated in, and impacted upon, major currents that washed through protein science as the field of Proteomics emerged. The large scale analysis of proteins became possible. This is not a history of the field. Instead we have tried to encapsulate the stimulating personal ride we had transiting from conventional academe, to a Major National Research Facility, to the formation of Proteomics company Proteome Systems Ltd. There were lots of blind alleys, wrong directions, but we also got some things right and our efforts, along with those of many other groups around the world, did change the face of protein science. While the transformation is by no means yet complete, protein science is very different from the field in the 1990s. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: 20years of Proteomics in memory of Viatliano Pallini. Guest Editors: Luca Bini, Juan J. Calvete, Natacha Turck, Denis Hochstrasser and Jean-Charles Sanchez.},
}
@article {pmid24732725,
year = {2014},
author = {Forler, S and Klein, O and Klose, J},
title = {Individualized proteomics.},
journal = {Journal of proteomics},
volume = {107},
number = {},
pages = {56-61},
doi = {10.1016/j.jprot.2014.04.003},
pmid = {24732725},
issn = {1876-7737},
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; Female ; Gene-Environment Interaction ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Male ; *Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ; Precision Medicine/history/*methods ; *Proteome/genetics/metabolism ; Proteomics/history/*methods ; },
abstract = {Human individuals differ from one another in almost all of their genes due to single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). When the maternal and the paternal genomes become combined in a F1 individual, the two alleles of each gene represent arbitrary combinations. In consequence, individuals show high variability in protein expression. Furthermore, within a proteome, the proteins form networks of protein-protein interactions. These networks differ between individuals in robustness against genetic or/and environmental perturbation due to polymorphisms, which differ in type and composition between individuals, and modify the arrangement of proteins in the proteomic network. As a general conclusion, the robustness of a human individual against diseases may depend on the structure and expression of the protein-protein interaction network that varies in its functional efficiency between individuals due to "network-polymorphisms". This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: 20years of Proteomics in memory of Viatliano Pallini. Guest Editors: Luca Bini, Juan J. Calvete, Natacha Turck, Denis Hochstrasser and Jean-Charles Sanchez.},
}
@article {pmid24732330,
year = {2014},
author = {Norris, DA},
title = {George W. Hambrick Jr (1922-2013).},
journal = {The Journal of investigative dermatology},
volume = {134},
number = {5},
pages = {1190-1191},
doi = {10.1038/jid.2014.125},
pmid = {24732330},
issn = {1523-1747},
mesh = {Dermatology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (U.S.)/*history ; Societies, Medical/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24727029,
year = {2014},
author = {Padrón, G and Domont, GB},
title = {Two decades of proteomics in Latin America: a personal view.},
journal = {Journal of proteomics},
volume = {107},
number = {},
pages = {83-92},
doi = {10.1016/j.jprot.2014.03.045},
pmid = {24727029},
issn = {1876-7737},
mesh = {Animals ; Escherichia coli/chemistry/metabolism ; Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry/metabolism ; Female ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Latin America ; Male ; Mice ; Periodicals as Topic/history ; Pregnancy ; Pregnancy Proteins/chemistry/metabolism ; Proteomics/*history/*methods ; },
abstract = {UNLABELLED: Proteomics is the charming young daughter of classical protein chemistry. It was conceived in 1975, year of invention of the first proteomic technique, the procedure to separate Escherichia coli and mouse tissue proteins in a two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel. Pregnancy, however, lasted for over 10years and deliverance occurred together with sister protein mass spectrometry. Jointly, the two techniques changed protein chemistry moving it from the study of single molecular entities to whole cell extracts and fluids. This review does not propose to report state-of-the art in proteomics in Latin America but rather to describe its development with emphasis on leading Brazil and Cuba as well as discuss proteomic research in these and other countries exposing the history and stories of researchers and selected laboratories that contributed to its establishment and development in the last 20years.

BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE: The significance of this manuscript is to recall and review the two decades that separated the first attempts of performing large scale analysis of proteins from the solid technical corpus that existed when the word "proteomics" was coined twenty years ago. This recollection is made within the scientific historical context of this decade, which also saw the blossoming of DNA cloning and sequencing. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: 20 years of Proteomics in memory of Viatliano Pallini. Guest Editors: Luca Bini , Juan J. Calvete, Natacha Turck, Denis Hochstrasser and Jean-Charles Sanchez.},
}
@article {pmid24649998,
year = {2014},
author = {Ozdemir, V and Endrenyi, L and Aynacıoğlu, S and Bragazzi, NL and Dandara, C and Dove, ES and Ferguson, LR and Geraci, CJ and Hafen, E and Kesim, BE and Kolker, E and Lee, EJ and Llerena, A and Nacak, M and Shimoda, K and Someya, T and Srivastava, S and Tomlinson, B and Vayena, E and Warnich, L and Yaşar, U},
title = {Bernard Lerer: recipient of the 2014 inaugural Werner Kalow Responsible Innovation Prize in Global Omics and Personalized Medicine (Pacific Rim Association for Clinical Pharmacogenetics).},
journal = {Omics : a journal of integrative biology},
volume = {18},
number = {4},
pages = {211-221},
doi = {10.1089/omi.2014.0029},
pmid = {24649998},
issn = {1557-8100},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genomics/*history ; Germany ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Israel ; Pharmacogenetics/*history ; Precision Medicine/*history ; },
abstract = {This article announces the recipient of the 2014 inaugural Werner Kalow Responsible Innovation Prize in Global Omics and Personalized Medicine by the Pacific Rim Association for Clinical Pharmacogenetics (PRACP): Bernard Lerer, professor of psychiatry and director of the Biological Psychiatry Laboratory, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel. The Werner Kalow Responsible Innovation Prize is given to an exceptional interdisciplinary scholar who has made highly innovative and enduring contributions to global omics science and personalized medicine, with both vertical and horizontal (transdisciplinary) impacts. The prize is established in memory of a beloved colleague, mentor, and friend, the late Professor Werner Kalow, who cultivated the idea and practice of pharmacogenetics in modern therapeutics commencing in the 1950s. PRACP, the prize's sponsor, is one of the longest standing learned societies in the Asia-Pacific region, and was founded by Kalow and colleagues more than two decades ago in the then-emerging field of pharmacogenetics. In announcing this inaugural prize and its winner, we seek to highlight the works of prize winner, Professor Lerer. Additionally, we contextualize the significance of the prize by recalling the life and works of Professor Kalow and providing a brief socio-technical history of the rise of pharmacogenetics and personalized medicine as a veritable form of 21(st) century scientific practice. The article also fills a void in previous social science analyses of pharmacogenetics, by bringing to the fore the works of Kalow from 1995 to 2008, when he presciently noted the rise of yet another field of postgenomics inquiry--pharmacoepigenetics--that railed against genetic determinism and underscored the temporal and spatial plasticity of genetic components of drug response, with invention of the repeated drug administration (RDA) method that estimates the dynamic heritabilities of drug response. The prize goes a long way to cultivate transgenerational capacity and broader cognizance of the concept and practice of responsible innovation as an important criterion of 21(st) century omics science and personalized medicine. A new call is presently in place for the 2016 PRACP Werner Kalow prize. Nominations can be made in support of an exceptional individual interdisciplinary scholar, or alternatively, an entire research team, from any region in the world with a record of highly innovative contributions to global omics science and/or personalized medicine, in the spirit of responsible innovation. The application process is straightforward, requiring a signed, 1500-word nomination letter (by the applicant or sponsor) submitted not later than May 31, 2015.},
}
@article {pmid24649618,
year = {2013},
author = {Fando, RA},
title = {[The role of S.N. Davidenkov School in becoming of national neuro-genetics].},
journal = {Problemy sotsial'noi gigieny, zdravookhraneniia i istorii meditsiny},
volume = {},
number = {6},
pages = {51-54},
pmid = {24649618},
issn = {0869-866X},
mesh = {Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Nervous System Diseases/genetics/*history ; Russia ; Schools, Medical/history ; },
abstract = {The article considers the biography of prominent Russian scientist, full member of the Academy of medical sciences of the USSR Sergei Nikolayevitch Davidenkov studying genetics of nervous diseases. The main directions of activities of the scientific school created by him are analyzed. The significance of this school in development of biology and medicine is established. The staff organizational structure, specificity of considered scientific school are established. The role of leader in organization of non-formal research community and development of scientific program is demonstrated. It is marked that in solution of many fundamental and practical tasks of medical genetics an immense merit belonged to scientific schools as a "strong side" of national science of the first half of XX century.},
}
@article {pmid24642887,
year = {2014},
author = {Thompson, MJ and Jiggins, CD},
title = {Supergenes and their role in evolution.},
journal = {Heredity},
volume = {113},
number = {1},
pages = {1-8},
doi = {10.1038/hdy.2014.20},
pmid = {24642887},
issn = {1365-2540},
support = {BB/H01439X/1//Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Adaptation, Biological/*genetics ; Genetic Linkage/*genetics ; Genetic Loci/*genetics ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Models, Genetic ; *Phenotype ; Polymorphism, Genetic/*genetics ; *Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {Adaptation is commonly a multidimensional problem, with changes in multiple traits required to match a complex environment. This is epitomized by balanced polymorphisms in which multiple phenotypes co-exist and are maintained in a population by a balance of selective forces. Consideration of such polymorphisms led to the concept of the supergene, where alternative phenotypes in a balanced polymorphism segregate as if controlled by a single genetic locus, resulting from tight genetic linkage between multiple functional loci. Recently, the molecular basis for several supergenes has been resolved. Thus, major chromosomal inversions have been shown to be associated with polymorphisms in butterflies, ants and birds, offering a mechanism for localised reduction in recombination. In several examples of plant self-incompatibility, the functional role of multiple elements within the supergene architecture has been demonstrated, conclusively showing that balanced polymorphism can be maintained at multiple coadapted and tightly linked elements. Despite recent criticism, we argue that the supergene concept remains relevant and is more testable than ever with modern molecular methods.},
}
@article {pmid24642211,
year = {2014},
author = {Anderson, L},
title = {Six decades searching for meaning in the proteome.},
journal = {Journal of proteomics},
volume = {107},
number = {},
pages = {24-30},
doi = {10.1016/j.jprot.2014.03.005},
pmid = {24642211},
issn = {1876-7737},
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Proteome ; Proteomics/*history/*methods ; },
abstract = {This review describes one thread in a fabric of developments leading to the present state of proteomics, stretching over 60years and ending with a prediction for 2024. While composed largely of personal reminiscences, the story offers some instructive successes and failures, and appears to be nearing the long-sought goal of deep insights into real biology. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: 20 Years of Proteomics in memory of Viatliano Pallini. Guest Editors: Luca Bini , Juan J. Calvete, Natacha Turck, Denis Hochstrasser and Jean-Charles Sanchez.},
}
@article {pmid24639214,
year = {2014},
author = {Stinski, MF},
title = {History of the molecular biology of cytomegaloviruses.},
journal = {Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)},
volume = {1119},
number = {},
pages = {1-14},
doi = {10.1007/978-1-62703-788-4_1},
pmid = {24639214},
issn = {1940-6029},
mesh = {Cloning, Molecular ; Cytomegalovirus/*genetics/pathogenicity ; Cytomegalovirus Infections/genetics/*virology ; DNA, Viral/*genetics ; Gene Expression Regulation, Viral ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/history/*methods ; Promoter Regions, Genetic ; },
abstract = {The history of the molecular biology of cytomegaloviruses from the purification of the virus and the viral DNA to the cloning and expression of the viral genes is reviewed. A key genetic element of cytomegalovirus (the CMV promoter) contributed to our understanding of eukaryotic cell molecular biology and to the development of lifesaving therapeutic proteins. The study of the molecular biology of cytomegaloviruses also contributed to the development of antivirals to control the viral infection.},
}
@article {pmid24631826,
year = {2014},
author = {Elia, G and Fugmann, T and Neri, D},
title = {From target discovery to clinical trials with armed antibody products.},
journal = {Journal of proteomics},
volume = {107},
number = {},
pages = {50-55},
doi = {10.1016/j.jprot.2014.02.034},
pmid = {24631826},
issn = {1876-7737},
mesh = {Animals ; *Antibodies, Neoplasm/immunology/therapeutic use ; *Antibody Formation ; Biomarkers, Tumor/*immunology ; Clinical Trials as Topic ; *Drug Delivery Systems/history/methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Proteomics/history/methods ; },
abstract = {UNLABELLED: Conventional chemotherapy of serious conditions (e.g., cancer and chronic inflammatory diseases) relies on the use of potent bioactive agents, which do not preferentially localize at the site of disease and which may harm healthy tissues. Intense pharmaceutical research efforts are being devoted to the development of targeted therapeutic agents, capable of selectively homing to diseased tissues, while sparing normal body structures. Biological mass spectrometry and chemical proteomics have revolutionized the way targets for ligand-based pharmacodelivery applications are discovered. In this article, we present a personal account on research activities in the field for the last decade, outlining our experience in the discovery of accessible biomarkers and in the development of potent targeted therapeutic agents.

BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE: The present review is a personal recollection highlighting the developments that led to present-day proteomics on a long march that lasted about 50years. It is meant to give to young scientists an overview on how science grows, which ones are the quantum jumps in science and which research is of particular significance in general and in the field of proteomics in particular. It also gives some real-life episodes of greater-than-life figures. As such, it can be viewed as a tutorial to stimulate the young generation to be creative (and use their imagination too!).This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: 20years of Proteomics in memory of Viatliano Pallini. Guest Editors: Luca Bini, Juan J. Calvete, Natacha Turck, Denis Hochstrasser and Jean-Charles Sanchez.},
}
@article {pmid24305133,
year = {2013},
author = {Ledford, H},
title = {Museums hunt for relics from genomics' early days.},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {504},
number = {7478},
pages = {20-21},
doi = {10.1038/504020a},
pmid = {24305133},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {Genomics/history/*instrumentation ; History, 20th Century ; *Museums ; },
}
@article {pmid24300658,
year = {2013},
author = {Kromberg, JG and Ramsay, M and Krause, A and Soodyall, H},
title = {Professor Trefor Jenkins: a tribute.},
journal = {South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde},
volume = {103},
number = {12 Suppl 1},
pages = {956-1034},
pmid = {24300658},
issn = {0256-9574},
mesh = {Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; South Africa ; },
}
@article {pmid24298026,
year = {2013},
author = {Smith, HW and Muller, WJ},
title = {Transgenic mouse models--a seminal breakthrough in oncogene research.},
journal = {Cold Spring Harbor protocols},
volume = {2013},
number = {12},
pages = {1099-1108},
doi = {10.1101/pdb.top069765},
pmid = {24298026},
issn = {1559-6095},
mesh = {Animals ; *Disease Models, Animal ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Mice ; *Mice, Transgenic ; Molecular Biology/*history/methods/*trends ; Neoplasms/*pathology/*physiopathology ; Oncogene Proteins/*analysis/genetics/metabolism ; },
abstract = {Transgenic mouse models are an integral part of modern cancer research, providing a versatile and powerful means of studying tumor initiation and progression, metastasis, and therapy. The present repertoire of these models is very diverse, with a wide range of strategies used to induce tumorigenesis by expressing dominant-acting oncogenes or disrupting the function of tumor-suppressor genes, often in a highly tissue-specific manner. Much of the current technology used in the creation and characterization of transgenic mouse models of cancer will be discussed in depth elsewhere. However, to gain a complete appreciation and understanding of these complex models, it is important to review the history of the field. Transgenic mouse models of cancer evolved as a new and, compared with the early cell-culture-based techniques, more physiologically relevant approach for studying the properties and transforming capacities of oncogenes. Here, we will describe early transgenic mouse models of cancer based on tissue-specific expression of oncogenes and discuss their impact on the development of this still rapidly growing field.},
}
@article {pmid24297879,
year = {2013},
author = {Viegas, J},
title = {Profile of Barbara Imperiali.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {110},
number = {52},
pages = {20850-20851},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1321020110},
pmid = {24297879},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Career Choice ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Polysaccharides/*biosynthesis ; Proteins/*genetics/*metabolism ; },
}
@article {pmid24288325,
year = {2013},
author = {Liebman, SW and Haber, JE},
title = {Retrospective. Fred Sherman (1932-2013).},
journal = {Science (New York, N.Y.)},
volume = {342},
number = {6162},
pages = {1059},
doi = {10.1126/science.1248055},
pmid = {24288325},
issn = {1095-9203},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Saccharomyces cerevisiae/*genetics ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24260934,
year = {2013},
author = {Baldia, J and Morrison, T},
title = {The history of genomics: what nurses need to know. Part one of a three part series.},
journal = {The Florida nurse},
volume = {61},
number = {3},
pages = {13},
pmid = {24260934},
issn = {0015-4199},
mesh = {*Genomics/history ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Nursing ; },
}
@article {pmid24242788,
year = {2013},
author = {Kucherlapati, R and Leinwand, LA},
title = {Frank Ruddle (1929-2013).},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {92},
number = {6},
pages = {839-840},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2013.05.012},
pmid = {24242788},
issn = {1537-6605},
mesh = {Chromosome Mapping/history ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24234179,
year = {2013},
author = {Holmes, K},
title = {Hugh Esmor Huxley (1924–2013).},
journal = {Journal of muscle research and cell motility},
volume = {34},
number = {3-4},
pages = {311-315},
doi = {10.1007/s10974-013-9365-6},
pmid = {24234179},
issn = {1573-2657},
mesh = {Crystallography, X-Ray/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid24217982,
year = {2014},
author = {Zetzsche, LH and Kotzer, KE and Wain, KE},
title = {Looking back and moving forward: an historical perspective from laboratory genetic counselors.},
journal = {Journal of genetic counseling},
volume = {23},
number = {3},
pages = {363-370},
doi = {10.1007/s10897-013-9670-7},
pmid = {24217982},
issn = {1573-3599},
mesh = {Genetic Counseling/history/*manpower ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
abstract = {Despite a consistent increase in genetic counselors who report working in laboratory positions, there is a relative dearth of literature on laboratory genetic counseling. Semi-structured interviews were completed with nine laboratory genetic counselors to document how positions were created and have changed with time. Interview transcriptions were analyzed for emerging themes. Several common themes were identified, including that early positions were often part-time, laboratory-initiated and had a lack of job definition. Laboratory genetic counselors commented on their evolving roles and responsibilities, with their positions becoming more technical and specialized over time and many taking on managerial and supervisory roles. All genetic counselors surveyed reported using core genetic counseling skills in their positions. The expansion of diagnostic testing and quickly evolving technology were common themes in regards to the future of laboratory genetic counselors, and participants commented on laboratory genetic counselors having expanding roles with data management, result interpretation and reporting, and guidance of other healthcare providers. Other comments included the impact of competition among laboratories and how training programs can better prepare genetic counseling students for a career in the laboratory setting. This study describes the emergence, and subsequent evolution, of laboratory genetic counseling positions as a significant subspecialty of genetic counseling.},
}
@article {pmid24207007,
year = {2013},
author = {Ostankovitch, M and Debatisse, M},
title = {From the replicon to replication programs in space and time: regulation of DNA replication and implications for genomic instability.},
journal = {Journal of molecular biology},
volume = {425},
number = {23},
pages = {4659-4662},
doi = {10.1016/j.jmb.2013.10.023},
pmid = {24207007},
issn = {1089-8638},
mesh = {*DNA Replication ; DNA Replication Timing ; *Genomic Instability ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/history/trends ; Replicon ; },
}
@article {pmid24206610,
year = {2013},
author = {Watts, G},
title = {Anthony James Pawson.},
journal = {Lancet (London, England)},
volume = {382},
number = {9902},
pages = {1398},
doi = {10.1016/S0140-6736(13)62204-7},
pmid = {24206610},
issn = {1474-547X},
mesh = {England ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid24197467,
year = {2014},
author = {Katz, L},
title = {Sir David Alan Hopwood.},
journal = {Journal of industrial microbiology & biotechnology},
volume = {41},
number = {2},
pages = {173-174},
doi = {10.1007/s10295-013-1372-5},
pmid = {24197467},
issn = {1476-5535},
mesh = {Biological Products/history ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Streptomyces/genetics ; United Kingdom ; },
}
@article {pmid24189390,
year = {2013},
author = {Noguera-Solano, R and Ruiz-Gutierrez, R and Rodriguez-Caso, JM},
title = {Genome: twisting stories with DNA.},
journal = {Endeavour},
volume = {37},
number = {4},
pages = {213-219},
doi = {10.1016/j.endeavour.2013.05.003},
pmid = {24189390},
issn = {1873-1929},
mesh = {DNA/*history ; Genetic Research/history ; *Genome ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
abstract = {In 1920, the German botanist Hans Winkler coined the concept of the 'genome'. This paper explores the history of a concept that has developed in parallel with advances in biology and supports novel and powerful heuristic biological research in the 21st century. From a structural interpretation (the genome as the haploid number of chromosomes), it has changed to keep pace with technological progress and new interpretations of the material of heredity. In the first place, the 'genome' was extended to include all the material in the nucleus, then the sum of all genes, and (with the discovery of the structure of DNA) the sum of the nucleotide base sequences. In the early 21st century, it has become a much more complex and central concept that has spawned the growing field of studies referred to as the 'omics'.},
}
@article {pmid24183015,
year = {2013},
author = {Sweatt, JD},
title = {The emerging field of neuroepigenetics.},
journal = {Neuron},
volume = {80},
number = {3},
pages = {624-632},
doi = {10.1016/j.neuron.2013.10.023},
pmid = {24183015},
issn = {1097-4199},
support = {P30 NS057098/NS/NINDS NIH HHS/United States ; R01 MH091122/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United States ; R01 NR012686/NR/NINR NIH HHS/United States ; R01 AG031722/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States ; R01 MH057014/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; Epigenesis, Genetic/*physiology ; *Epigenomics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Neurosciences/history ; },
abstract = {Over the past 25 years, the broad field of epigenetics and, over the past decade in particular, the emerging field of neuroepigenetics have begun to have tremendous impact in the areas of learned behavior, neurotoxicology, CNS development, cognition, addiction, and psychopathology. However, epigenetics is such a new field that in most of these areas the impact is more in the category of fascinating implications as opposed to established facts. In this brief commentary, I will attempt to address and delineate some of the open questions and areas of opportunity that discoveries in epigenetics are providing to the discipline of neuroscience.},
}
@article {pmid24161968,
year = {2013},
author = {Marx, V},
title = {The author file: Jeff Dangl.},
journal = {Nature methods},
volume = {10},
number = {10},
pages = {919},
doi = {10.1038/nmeth.2653},
pmid = {24161968},
issn = {1548-7105},
mesh = {Genetics, Microbial/history/methods ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/history/methods ; Plant Diseases/microbiology ; Plants/*microbiology ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24160422,
year = {2014},
author = {Zuk, M and Garcia-Gonzalez, F and Herberstein, ME and Simmons, LW},
title = {Model systems, taxonomic bias, and sexual selection: beyond Drosophila.},
journal = {Annual review of entomology},
volume = {59},
number = {},
pages = {321-338},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-ento-011613-162014},
pmid = {24160422},
issn = {1545-4487},
mesh = {Animals ; Arthropods/genetics/*physiology ; Diptera/genetics/physiology ; Drosophila melanogaster/genetics/physiology ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Mating Preference, Animal ; *Models, Animal ; },
abstract = {Although model systems are useful in entomology, allowing generalizations based on a few well-known species, they also have drawbacks. It can be difficult to know how far to generalize from information in a few species: Are all flies like Drosophila? The use of model systems is particularly problematic in studying sexual selection, where variability among taxa is key to the evolution of different behaviors. A bias toward the use of a few insect species, particularly from the genus Drosophila, is evident in the sexual selection and sexual conflict literature over the past several decades, although the diversity of study organisms has increased more recently. As the number of model systems used to study sexual conflict increased, support for the idea that sexual interactions resulted in harm to females decreased. Future work should choose model systems thoughtfully, combining well-known species with those that can add to the variation that allows us to make more meaningful generalizations.},
}
@article {pmid24159795,
year = {2013},
author = {Goncharov, NP},
title = {[125th birth anniversary of the outstanding botanist Peter Mikhailovich Zhukovsky].},
journal = {Genetika},
volume = {49},
number = {5},
pages = {549-557},
pmid = {24159795},
issn = {0016-6758},
mesh = {Anniversaries and Special Events ; Botany/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Periodicals as Topic ; Plant Infertility/genetics ; Portraits as Topic ; Triticum/genetics ; },
abstract = {Peter Mikhailovich Zhykovsky--botanist, monograph of the genus Aegilops, closest associate of N.N. Vavilov, Director of the All-Union Institute of Plant Industry, Academic Secretary of the Department of Agriculture of VASKhNIL, and the first Editor-in-Chief of the Genetika journal. He postulated a theory on host-parasite coevolution at their common place of origin, and put forward the concept on Megagene centers of origin of cultivated plants and their endemic Microgene centers. He discovered and described the new wheat species Triticum timopheevii (Zhuk.) Zhuk. This species is unique with respect to its immunity to diseases and pests, and is the carrier of the genes for cytoplasmic male sterility.},
}
@article {pmid24145450,
year = {2013},
author = {Viegas, J},
title = {Profile of Dennis Lo.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {110},
number = {47},
pages = {18742-18743},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1317868110},
pmid = {24145450},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Career Choice ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Neoplasms/*diagnosis ; Prenatal Diagnosis/*methods ; },
}
@article {pmid24137624,
year = {2013},
author = {},
title = {American Genetic Association presents the annual Stephen J. O'Brien Award.},
journal = {The Journal of heredity},
volume = {104},
number = {5},
pages = {734},
pmid = {24137624},
issn = {1465-7333},
mesh = {Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; Evolution, Molecular ; France ; Gene Flow/genetics ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 21st Century ; Passeriformes/*genetics ; Societies, Scientific ; },
}
@article {pmid24135003,
year = {2013},
author = {Weiss, A},
title = {Tony Pawson: Modular protein domains and the links to intracellular signaling.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {110},
number = {44},
pages = {17604-17605},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1317096110},
pmid = {24135003},
issn = {1091-6490},
support = {P30 DK063720/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States ; //Howard Hughes Medical Institute/United States ; },
mesh = {Career Choice ; Computational Biology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Protein Structure, Tertiary/*physiology ; Proteomics/*history ; Signal Transduction/*physiology ; },
}
@article {pmid24127495,
year = {2013},
author = {Moremen, KW},
title = {The 2013 Karl Meyer Award and Rosalind Kornfeld Award from the Society for Glycobiology.},
journal = {Glycobiology},
volume = {23},
number = {11},
pages = {1207-1209},
doi = {10.1093/glycob/cwt076},
pmid = {24127495},
issn = {1460-2423},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Glycomics/*history ; Glycosylation ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Societies, Scientific ; Switzerland ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24123982,
year = {2013},
author = {Opitz, JM and Neri, G},
title = {Historical perspective on developmental concepts and terminology.},
journal = {American journal of medical genetics. Part A},
volume = {161A},
number = {11},
pages = {2711-2725},
doi = {10.1002/ajmg.a.36244},
pmid = {24123982},
issn = {1552-4833},
mesh = {*Biology/history ; *Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 18th Century ; History, 19th Century ; Humans ; Terminology as Topic ; },
abstract = {In their ontogeny and phylogeny all living beings are historical entities. The revolution in biology of the 18th and 19th centuries that did away with the scala naturae according to which we humans, the acme of creation, "made a little lower than the angels," also led to the gradual realization that a humble one-celled protist ("protoctist"), such as Entamoeba histolytica of ill repute [Margulis and Chapman, ] has the same 4-billion-year phylogeny as that of Homo sapiens, vivid testimony to common ancestry and the relatedness of all living beings on earth. The group of medical geneticists who assembled at the NIH, Bethesda, MD this January to address terms pertaining to human ontogeny, did so in the long tradition of Sydenham, Linnaeus, Meckel, Geoffroy St-Hilaire père et fils, Wilhelm His and so many others before who had over the previous two centuries wrestled as earnestly as they could with concepts of "classification" and nomenclature of developmental anomalies. The prior massive need for classification per se in medical morphology has diminished over the years in favor of ever more sophisticated understanding of pathogenesis and cause through experimental biology and genetics; however, in the winter of 2013 it was still found prudent to respect terminological precedent on general terms while recognizing recent advances in developmental pathology requiring clarification and definition of special terms. Efforts along similar lines instigated by the German Society of Anatomists at their first meeting in Leipzig in 1887 culminated, after intense years of work by hundreds of experts and consultants under the goad of Wilhelm His, in the Basel Nomina Anatomica [BNA, His (1895)]. His, himself, stated prefatorily that the BNA had no legislative weight, only an evanescent consensus of many to be amended in the future as needed and indicated. Without hubris, no one before or after will do the same. The more substantial the consensus the more permanent the structure. After some 120 years the BNA is alive and flourishing. Now retitled Terminologia Anatomica, it has been amended and added to many times, is still in Latin but now with synonyms in English, the new lingua franca of science, for every anatomical, histological and embryological term. May our successors be equally effective.},
}
@article {pmid24123719,
year = {2013},
author = {Cohen, MM},
title = {Giovanni Neri.},
journal = {American journal of medical genetics. Part A},
volume = {161A},
number = {11},
pages = {2704-2705},
doi = {10.1002/ajmg.a.36262},
pmid = {24123719},
issn = {1552-4833},
mesh = {*Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; Italy ; },
}
@article {pmid24123703,
year = {2013},
author = {Genuardi, M and Gurrieri, F and Zollino, M},
title = {Encomium: Giovanni Neri--polyhedral and down-to-earth mentor.},
journal = {American journal of medical genetics. Part A},
volume = {161A},
number = {11},
pages = {2687-2690},
doi = {10.1002/ajmg.a.36261},
pmid = {24123703},
issn = {1552-4833},
mesh = {Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Italy ; },
}
@article {pmid24114706,
year = {2014},
author = {Malhotra, AK},
title = {Genes and schizophrenia: from a Festschrift Seminar honoring William T. Carpenter Jr, MD.},
journal = {Schizophrenia bulletin},
volume = {40 Suppl 2},
number = {},
pages = {S117-22},
doi = {10.1093/schbul/sbt135},
pmid = {24114706},
issn = {1745-1701},
support = {MH079200/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United States ; MH080173/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Pharmacogenetics/history/*methods ; Schizophrenia/*drug therapy/*genetics/history/*physiopathology ; },
abstract = {Recent data have begun to elucidate the genetic architecture of schizophrenia, as well as provide new insights into the relationships of specific genetic factors across diagnostic boundaries, with specific symptom domains, and in the prediction of antipsychotic treatment response. Not surprisingly, work conducted at the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center (MPRC), led by Dr William Carpenter, has helped to guide the thinking behind much of this work, as well as contributed valuable data toward these efforts. In this article, I will briefly summarize some of the major findings emerging from these lines of research and highlight the role of the Dr Carpenter and his colleagues at the MPRC in this area.},
}
@article {pmid24107572,
year = {2013},
author = {Clerget-Darpoux, F and Elston, RC},
title = {Will formal genetics become dispensable?.},
journal = {Human heredity},
volume = {76},
number = {2},
pages = {47-52},
doi = {10.1159/000354571},
pmid = {24107572},
issn = {1423-0062},
mesh = {Extrachromosomal Inheritance/*genetics ; Genetics/*history/*trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Inheritance Patterns/*genetics ; *Models, Genetic ; *Multifactorial Inheritance ; Phenotype ; Precision Medicine/methods/*trends ; },
}
@article {pmid24095859,
year = {2013},
author = {Hyrien, O and Rappailles, A and Guilbaud, G and Baker, A and Chen, CL and Goldar, A and Petryk, N and Kahli, M and Ma, E and d'Aubenton-Carafa, Y and Audit, B and Thermes, C and Arneodo, A},
title = {From simple bacterial and archaeal replicons to replication N/U-domains.},
journal = {Journal of molecular biology},
volume = {425},
number = {23},
pages = {4673-4689},
doi = {10.1016/j.jmb.2013.09.021},
pmid = {24095859},
issn = {1089-8638},
mesh = {Animals ; Archaea/*genetics ; Bacteria/*genetics ; *DNA Replication ; Eukaryota/*genetics ; *Genome ; Genomic Instability ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mammals ; Molecular Biology/history/trends ; *Replicon ; },
abstract = {The Replicon Theory proposed 50 years ago has proven to apply for replicons of the three domains of life. Here, we review our knowledge of genome organization into single and multiple replicons in bacteria, archaea and eukarya. Bacterial and archaeal replicator/initiator systems are quite specific and efficient, whereas eukaryotic replicons show degenerate specificity and efficiency, allowing for complex regulation of origin firing time. We expand on recent evidence that ~50% of the human genome is organized as ~1,500 megabase-sized replication domains with a characteristic parabolic (U-shaped) replication timing profile and linear (N-shaped) gradient of replication fork polarity. These N/U-domains correspond to self-interacting segments of the chromatin fiber bordered by open chromatin zones and replicate by cascades of origin firing initiating at their borders and propagating to their center, possibly by fork-stimulated initiation. The conserved occurrence of this replication pattern in the germline of mammals has resulted over evolutionary times in the formation of megabase-sized domains with an N-shaped nucleotide compositional skew profile due to replication-associated mutational asymmetries. Overall, these results reveal an evolutionarily conserved but developmentally plastic organization of replication that is driving mammalian genome evolution.},
}
@article {pmid24065562,
year = {2014},
author = {Kendler, KS and Neale, MC},
title = {The contributions of Lindon Eaves to psychiatric genetics.},
journal = {Behavior genetics},
volume = {44},
number = {3},
pages = {198-204},
doi = {10.1007/s10519-013-9614-x},
pmid = {24065562},
issn = {1573-3297},
mesh = {Adolescent ; Adolescent Behavior/history ; Genetic Association Studies/*history ; Genetics, Behavioral/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Twin Studies as Topic/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid24061478,
year = {2013},
author = {Lodish, H},
title = {Cloning expeditions: risky but rewarding.},
journal = {Molecular and cellular biology},
volume = {33},
number = {23},
pages = {4620-4627},
doi = {10.1128/MCB.01111-13},
pmid = {24061478},
issn = {1098-5549},
support = {P01 HL032262/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States ; 2 P01 HL032262/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States ; DK0467618/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; *Cloning, Molecular ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Massachusetts ; Membrane Proteins/biosynthesis/genetics ; Molecular Biology/history ; },
abstract = {In the 1980s, a good part of my laboratory was using the then-new recombinant DNA techniques to clone and characterize many important cell surface membrane proteins: GLUT1 (the red cell glucose transporter) and then GLUT2 and GLUT4, the red cell anion exchange protein (Band 3), asialoglycoprotein receptor subunits, sucrase-isomaltase, the erythropoietin receptor, and two of the subunits of the transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) receptor. These cloned genes opened many new fields of basic research, including membrane insertion and trafficking of transmembrane proteins, signal transduction by many members of the cytokine and TGF-β families of receptors, and the cellular physiology of glucose and anion transport. They also led to many insights into the molecular biology of several cancers, hematopoietic disorders, and diabetes. This work was done by an exceptional group of postdocs and students who took exceptionally large risks in developing and using novel cloning technologies. Unsurprisingly, all have gone on to become leaders in the fields of molecular cell biology and molecular medicine.},
}
@article {pmid24059436,
year = {2014},
author = {Perkins, SL},
title = {Malaria's many mates: past, present, and future of the systematics of the order Haemosporida.},
journal = {The Journal of parasitology},
volume = {100},
number = {1},
pages = {11-25},
doi = {10.1645/13-362.1},
pmid = {24059436},
issn = {1937-2345},
mesh = {Animals ; Genomics/history ; Haemosporida/*classification/genetics/physiology ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; History, Ancient ; Humans ; Malaria/*history/parasitology ; Phylogeny ; },
abstract = {Malaria has been one of the most important diseases of humans throughout history and continues to be a major public health concern. The 5 species of Plasmodium that cause the disease in humans are part of the order Haemosporida, a diverse group of parasites that all have heteroxenous life cycles, alternating between a vertebrate host and a free-flying, blood-feeding dipteran vector. Traditionally, the identification and taxonomy of these parasites relied heavily on life-history characteristics, basic morphological features, and the host species infected. However, molecular approaches to resolving the phylogeny of the group have sometimes challenged many of these traditional hypotheses. One of the greatest debates has concerned the origin of the most virulent of the human-infecting parasites, Plasmodium falciparum, with early results suggesting a close relationship with an avian parasite. Subsequent phylogenetic studies placed it firmly within the mammalian clade instead, but the avian origin hypothesis has been revived with recent genome-based analyses. The rooting of the tree of Haemosporida has also been inconsistent, and the various topologies that result certainly affect our interpretation of the history of the group. There is clearly a pressing need to obtain a much more complete degree of taxon sampling of haemosporidians, as well as a greater number of characters before confidence can be placed in any hypothesis regarding the evolutionary history of the order. There are numerous challenges moving forward, particularly for generating complete genome sequences of avian and saurian parasites.},
}
@article {pmid24055872,
year = {2013},
author = {Weissmann, C},
title = {The power of methods.},
journal = {Biochemical and biophysical research communications},
volume = {440},
number = {4},
pages = {463-466},
doi = {10.1016/j.bbrc.2013.09.051},
pmid = {24055872},
issn = {1090-2104},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/history/*methods ; },
abstract = {Major advances in science are usually launched by new methods or techniques. Because this essay is not intended as a history of science, I shall not invoke the invention of the microscope or telescope as the gateways to inner and outer space, but will restrict myself to developments I have witnessed, or almost witnessed, during my scientific lifetime.},
}
@article {pmid24046385,
year = {2013},
author = {Clevers, H},
title = {A gutsy approach to stem cells and signalling: an interview with Hans Clevers.},
journal = {Disease models & mechanisms},
volume = {6},
number = {5},
pages = {1053-1056},
doi = {10.1242/dmm.013367},
pmid = {24046385},
issn = {1754-8411},
mesh = {Animals ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mice ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Netherlands ; *Signal Transduction ; Stem Cells/*metabolism ; },
}
@article {pmid24026622,
year = {2014},
author = {Martin, N},
title = {Lindon Eaves: the astonishing decade.},
journal = {Behavior genetics},
volume = {44},
number = {3},
pages = {193-197},
doi = {10.1007/s10519-013-9613-y},
pmid = {24026622},
issn = {1573-3297},
mesh = {Adolescent ; Genetics, Behavioral/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; United States ; },
abstract = {The contributions of Lindon Eaves to the development of the subject of behavior genetics are reviewed, with a focus on the 1970s, the first astonishing decade of his career when he made major theoretical advances in the design and power of human quantitative genetic studies, including treatment of assortative mating, cultural transmission, sex limitation, sibling effects, gene-environment interaction and covariation, and multivariate genetic analysis. He also made important substantive contributions to our understanding of the causes of individual differences in cognition, personality, social and sexual attitudes, and smoking.},
}
@article {pmid24018765,
year = {2013},
author = {Stark, A and Seneta, E},
title = {Wilhelm Weinberg's early contribution to segregation analysis.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {195},
number = {1},
pages = {1-6},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.113.152975},
pmid = {24018765},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Chromosome Segregation ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Germany ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; },
abstract = {Wilhelm Weinberg (1862-1937) is a largely forgotten pioneer of human and medical genetics. His name is linked with that of the English mathematician G. H. Hardy in the Hardy-Weinberg law, pervasive in textbooks on population genetics since it expresses stability over generations of zygote frequencies AA, Aa, aa under random mating. One of Weinberg's signal contributions, in an article whose centenary we celebrate, was to verify that Mendel's segregation law still held in the setting of human heredity, contrary to the then-prevailing view of William Bateson (1861-1926), the leading Mendelian geneticist of the time. Specifically, Weinberg verified that the proportion of recessive offspring genotypes aa in human parental crossings Aa × Aa (that is, the segregation ratio for such a setting) was indeed p=1/4. We focus in a nontechnical way on his procedure, called the simple sib method, and on the heated controversy with Felix Bernstein (1878-1956) in the 1920s and 1930s over work stimulated by Weinberg's article.},
}
@article {pmid24009385,
year = {2013},
author = {Hunter, T},
title = {Retrospective. Tony Pawson (1952-2013).},
journal = {Science (New York, N.Y.)},
volume = {341},
number = {6150},
pages = {1078},
doi = {10.1126/science.1244986},
pmid = {24009385},
issn = {1095-9203},
mesh = {England ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Proteins/chemistry/*history/metabolism ; *Signal Transduction ; United States ; *src Homology Domains ; },
}
@article {pmid24003648,
year = {2013},
author = {Dorsett, D},
title = {What fruit flies can tell us about human birth defects.},
journal = {Missouri medicine},
volume = {110},
number = {4},
pages = {309-313},
pmid = {24003648},
issn = {0026-6620},
support = {P01 HD052860/HD/NICHD NIH HHS/United States ; R01 GM055683/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; Chromosome Mapping ; De Lange Syndrome/*genetics ; Drosophila/*genetics ; Genetic Research/history ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Models, Animal ; Proteins/*genetics/history ; },
abstract = {Many times, when a human genetic disease is mapped to mutations in a specific gene, little is known about the biological functions of the affected gene. Development of new therapeutic methods is facilitated by understanding the gene's biological roles. Such information can often be obtained in animal models, such as the fruit fly. Here we describe how understanding a gene's function in fruit flies has illuminated the etiology of Cornelia de Lange syndrome.},
}
@article {pmid23994540,
year = {2013},
author = {Russell, LB},
title = {The Mouse House: a brief history of the ORNL mouse-genetics program, 1947-2009.},
journal = {Mutation research},
volume = {753},
number = {2},
pages = {69-90},
doi = {10.1016/j.mrrev.2013.08.003},
pmid = {23994540},
issn = {0027-5107},
mesh = {Animals ; Chromosomes ; Cytogenetics ; Female ; Genetic Research/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Male ; Mice/*genetics ; Mutagenesis ; Mutation ; Sex Chromosomes ; Zygote ; },
abstract = {The large mouse genetics program at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) is often remembered chiefly for the germ-cell mutation-rate data it generated and their uses in estimating the risk of heritable radiation damage. In fact, it soon became a multi-faceted research effort that, over a period of almost 60 years, generated a wealth of information in the areas of mammalian mutagenesis, basic genetics (later enriched by molecular techniques), cytogenetics, reproductive biology, biochemistry of germ cells, and teratology. Research in the area of germ-cell mutagenesis explored the important physical and biological factors that affect the frequency and nature of induced mutations and made several unexpected discoveries, such as the major importance of the perigametic interval (the zygote stage) for the origin of spontaneous mutations and for the sensitivity to induced genetic change. Of practical value was the discovery that ethylnitrosourea was a supermutagen for point mutations, making high-efficiency mutagenesis in the mouse feasible worldwide. Teratogenesis findings resulted in recommendations still generally accepted in radiological practice. Studies supporting the mutagenesis research added whole bodies of information about mammalian germ-cell development and about molecular targets in germ cells. The early decision to not merely count but propagate genetic variants of all sorts made possible further discoveries, such as the Y-chromosome's importance in mammalian sex determination and the identification of rare X-autosome translocations, which, in turn, led to the formulation of the single-active-X hypothesis and provided tools for studies of functional mosaicism for autosomal genes, male sterility, and chromosome-pairing mechanism. Extensive genetic and then molecular analyses of large numbers of induced specific-locus mutants resulted in fine-structure physical and correlated functional mapping of significant portions of the mouse genome and constituted a valuable source of mouse models for human genetic disorders.},
}
@article {pmid23989953,
year = {2013},
author = {Knapp, S},
title = {Evolution. What, where, and when?.},
journal = {Science (New York, N.Y.)},
volume = {341},
number = {6151},
pages = {1182-1184},
doi = {10.1126/science.1240880},
pmid = {23989953},
issn = {1095-9203},
mesh = {*Animal Distribution ; Animals ; *Biological Evolution ; History, 19th Century ; Phylogeography/*history ; *Selection, Genetic ; },
}
@article {pmid23958312,
year = {2013},
author = {Sadee, W},
title = {Bridging material and biological sciences: the legacy of Hans Peter Merkle.},
journal = {European journal of pharmaceutics and biopharmaceutics : official journal of Arbeitsgemeinschaft fur Pharmazeutische Verfahrenstechnik e.V},
volume = {85},
number = {1},
pages = {3-4},
doi = {10.1016/j.ejpb.2013.06.026},
pmid = {23958312},
issn = {1873-3441},
mesh = {Animals ; Biology/education/*history ; Cell-Penetrating Peptides/pharmacology ; Chemistry, Pharmaceutical/history ; Drug Delivery Systems ; Drug Industry/*history ; Europe ; Germany ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Periodicals as Topic ; Pharmacogenetics/education/history ; Pharmacology/education/*history ; Receptors, Neurotransmitter/agonists/antagonists & inhibitors/metabolism ; San Francisco ; },
}
@article {pmid23957890,
year = {2014},
author = {Edwards, AW},
title = {R.A. Fisher's gene-centred view of evolution and the Fundamental Theorem of Natural Selection.},
journal = {Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society},
volume = {89},
number = {1},
pages = {135-147},
doi = {10.1111/brv.12047},
pmid = {23957890},
issn = {1469-185X},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biological Evolution ; Biometry/history ; England ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; *Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {The background to R.A. Fisher's enunciation of his Fundamental Theorem of Natural Selection in 1930 is traced and the Theorem in its original form explained. It can now be seen as the centrepiece of Fisher's introduction of the gene-centred approach to evolutionary biology. Although this paper is a sequel to Edwards (1994) it is not a review of the recent literature on the Theorem, to which, however, reference is made at the end.},
}
@article {pmid23957702,
year = {2014},
author = {Riva, MA and Manzoni, M and Isimbaldi, G and Cesana, G and Pagni, F},
title = {Histochemistry: historical development and current use in pathology.},
journal = {Biotechnic & histochemistry : official publication of the Biological Stain Commission},
volume = {89},
number = {2},
pages = {81-90},
doi = {10.3109/10520295.2013.822559},
pmid = {23957702},
issn = {1473-7760},
mesh = {Histocytochemistry/*history/*trends ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Pathology, Molecular/history/trends ; Staining and Labeling/history/trends ; },
abstract = {We describe the history of the histochemical stains that contributed most to the development of modern pathology during the last two centuries. Histochemical stains are presented in a list, which provides the essential information about year, country and main use of each to enable the reader to follow the chronological and geographical history of histochemistry. In addition to the historical evaluation of histochemistry development, we investigate how many classical histochemical stains survive in a modern laboratory of pathology and how often they are used for diagnostic practice compared to immunohistochemical (IHC) techniques. A ratio of about one histochemical reaction to 13 IHC reactions was tabulated. Finally, our data make it possible to define different cultural approaches to the terminology of histochemical and IHC stains: the former were based on eponyms, which link the stain with the name of its inventor, while the latter use a more impersonal biological terminology.},
}
@article {pmid23941597,
year = {2014},
author = {Giordano, P},
title = {Monica Gallivan, good-bye to a friend.},
journal = {International journal of laboratory hematology},
volume = {36},
number = {1},
pages = {105-106},
doi = {10.1111/ijlh.12133},
pmid = {23941597},
issn = {1751-553X},
mesh = {Hemoglobinopathies/*diagnosis/history/pathology ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Pathology, Molecular/history/*manpower ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23926223,
year = {2013},
author = {Szego, MJ and Buchanan, JA and Scherer, SW},
title = {Building trust in 21st century genomics.},
journal = {G3 (Bethesda, Md.)},
volume = {3},
number = {8},
pages = {1209-1211},
doi = {10.1534/g3.113.007690},
pmid = {23926223},
issn = {2160-1836},
mesh = {Databases, Genetic/ethics/*legislation & jurisprudence ; Genomics/history/*legislation & jurisprudence/trends ; HeLa Cells ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid23918417,
year = {2013},
author = {Peterson, PA},
title = {Historical overview of transposable element research.},
journal = {Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)},
volume = {1057},
number = {},
pages = {1-9},
doi = {10.1007/978-1-62703-568-2_1},
pmid = {23918417},
issn = {1940-6029},
mesh = {DNA Transposable Elements/*genetics ; Genes, Plant/genetics ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Mutation ; Zea mays/genetics ; },
abstract = {Research on transposable elements began nearly 100 years ago with classical genetic experiments. Remarkably, many of the activities of transposable elements, such as the ability to transpose, to induce chromosome rearrangements, to undergo cycles of activity and inactivity, and to affect expression of neighboring genes, were described by geneticists long before transposons were molecularly isolated. This chapter traces the historical roots of transposable element research, describing the scientists, their observations, and interpretations as they sought to understand the enigma of transposable elements.},
}
@article {pmid23915878,
year = {2013},
author = {Li, X and Liu, Y and Wang, Q},
title = {Darwin's pangenesis and epigenetic effects on brain functions.},
journal = {Biological psychiatry},
volume = {74},
number = {11},
pages = {e31},
doi = {10.1016/j.biopsych.2013.06.015},
pmid = {23915878},
issn = {1873-2402},
mesh = {Animals ; Brain/*physiology ; *Epigenesis, Genetic ; Genetics/history ; *Heredity ; History, 19th Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid23901416,
year = {2013},
author = {Ptashne, M},
title = {Francois Jacob (1920-2013).},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {153},
number = {6},
pages = {1180-1182},
pmid = {23901416},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {France ; *Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Operon ; },
}
@article {pmid23888831,
year = {2013},
author = {Santesmases, MJ},
title = {The biological landscape of polyploidy: chromosomes under glass in the 1950s.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {35},
number = {1},
pages = {91-97},
pmid = {23888831},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Animals ; Cell Biology/*history ; Chromosomes/ultrastructure ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Plants/genetics ; *Polyploidy ; },
abstract = {The influence of plant cytology on the construction of cytological practices with animal cells is explored here. This short essay aims at a dialogue with Hans-Jörg Rheinberger's proposal about the intersections between objects and instruments and about how to look at slide "preparations." I select microscopic preparations of chromosomes to analyse the practices and meaning of polyploidy as an historical object. The study of the practices of Swedish geneticist Albert Levan by the late 1940s and early 1950s suggests that polyploidy filled the gap between plants and animals, while at the same time accounted for differences between the two.},
}
@article {pmid23888828,
year = {2013},
author = {Barahona, A},
title = {The history of genetics in Mexico in the light of A Cultural History of Heredity.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {35},
number = {1},
pages = {69-74},
pmid = {23888828},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Culture ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Mexico ; },
abstract = {In this paper I analyze the conditions for scientific research and the social relationships that allowed the establishment of genetics in Mexico, in the laboratory, the clinic and in agronomy. I give three examples to illustrate how the cultural history of heredity has enlightened this work: the introduction and institutionalization of Mendelism in Mexico, the hereditarian ideas of medical doctors in the late nineteenth century, and the introduction of medical genetics in Mexico.},
}
@article {pmid23888825,
year = {2013},
author = {López-Beltrán, C},
title = {Exploring heredity: diachronic and synchronic connections.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {35},
number = {1},
pages = {45-50},
pmid = {23888825},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; *Heredity ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
abstract = {A brief description and evaluation of the contributions that Hans-Jörg Rheinberger has made to our understanding of the history of modern views of biological heredity is provided. Focusing on the efforts that Rheinberger and his close collaborator Staffan Miller-Wille, made to bring together previously scattered and unconnected scholarship and produce a unified and strikingly powerful account of the emergence of Heredity first and Genetics later as central explanatory resources for biological sciences, this paper tries to explain the importance of such efforts, and to contribute with suggestions for further work on these topics.},
}
@article {pmid23849913,
year = {2013},
author = {Watts, G},
title = {Mary-Claire King: taking genes beyond the lab.},
journal = {Lancet (London, England)},
volume = {382},
number = {9887},
pages = {119},
doi = {10.1016/S0140-6736(13)61551-2},
pmid = {23849913},
issn = {1474-547X},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; Genome, Human ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Motion Pictures ; Washington ; Women's Rights ; },
}
@article {pmid23828963,
year = {2013},
author = {Friedberg, EC},
title = {A life of fixing DNA.},
journal = {DNA repair},
volume = {12},
number = {6},
pages = {389-393},
pmid = {23828963},
issn = {1568-7856},
mesh = {*DNA Repair ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; South Africa ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23828642,
year = {2013},
author = {Justice, M},
title = {Of mice and men, and medicine: an interview with Monica Justice.},
journal = {Disease models & mechanisms},
volume = {6},
number = {4},
pages = {871-873},
doi = {10.1242/dmm.011809},
pmid = {23828642},
issn = {1754-8411},
mesh = {Animals ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Medicine ; Mice ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23824968,
year = {2013},
author = {Edwards, AW},
title = {Robert Heath Lock and his textbook of genetics, 1906.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {194},
number = {3},
pages = {529-537},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.113.151266},
pmid = {23824968},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Biological Evolution ; Chromosomes ; *Genetic Linkage ; Genetics/education/*history ; *History, 19th Century ; *History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {Robert Heath Lock (1879-1915), a Cambridge botanist associated with William Bateson and R. C. Punnett, published his book Recent Progress in the Study of Variation, Heredity, and Evolution in 1906. This was a remarkable textbook of genetics for one appearing so early in the Mendelian era. It covered not only Mendelism but evolution, natural selection, biometry, mutation, and cytology. It ran to five editions but was, despite its success, largely forgotten following Lock's early death in 1915. Nevertheless it was the book that inspired H. J. Muller to do genetics and was remembered by A. H. Sturtevant as the source of the earliest suggestion that linkage might be related to the exchange of parts between homologous chromosomes. Here we also put forward evidence that it had a major influence on the statistician and geneticist R. A. Fisher at the time he was a mathematics student at Cambridge.},
}
@article {pmid23814159,
year = {2013},
author = {Lawler, M and Selby, P},
title = {Personalized cancer medicine: are we there yet?.},
journal = {The oncologist},
volume = {18},
number = {6},
pages = {649-650},
doi = {10.1634/theoncologist.2013-0189},
pmid = {23814159},
issn = {1549-490X},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Neoplasms/*genetics/history/*therapy ; Pharmacogenetics/history ; Precision Medicine/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid23786296,
year = {2013},
author = {Rewers, M},
title = {The next big idea.},
journal = {Diabetes technology & therapeutics},
volume = {15 Suppl 2},
number = {},
pages = {S2-29-S2-36},
doi = {10.1089/dia.2013.0141},
pmid = {23786296},
issn = {1557-8593},
support = {R01 DK032493/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/history/immunology/*prevention & control ; Female ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Immunogenetics/history/trends ; Male ; Organizational Innovation ; Primary Prevention ; *Research/history/trends ; Research Support as Topic ; },
abstract = {George S. Eisenbarth will remain in our memories as a brilliant scientist and great collaborator. His quest to discover the cause and prevention of type 1 (autoimmune) diabetes started from building predictive models based on immunogenetic markers. Despite his tremendous contributions to our understanding of the natural history of pre-type 1 diabetes and potential mechanisms, George left us with several big questions to answer before his quest is completed.},
}
@article {pmid23801597,
year = {2013},
author = {White, JG},
title = {Getting into the mind of a worm--a personal view.},
journal = {WormBook : the online review of C. elegans biology},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {1-10},
doi = {10.1895/wormbook.1.158.1},
pmid = {23801597},
issn = {1551-8507},
mesh = {Animals ; *Caenorhabditis elegans ; *Computer Systems ; England ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Laboratories/history ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Nervous System Physiological Phenomena ; },
}
@article {pmid23800862,
year = {2013},
author = {Barsh, GS and Myers, RM},
title = {David R. Cox 1946-2013.},
journal = {Nature genetics},
volume = {45},
number = {7},
pages = {716},
doi = {10.1038/ng.2679},
pmid = {23800862},
issn = {1546-1718},
mesh = {Chromosome Mapping/*history ; Genetics/*history ; Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/*history ; Ohio ; Oregon ; Pediatrics/history ; San Francisco ; },
}
@article {pmid23785784,
year = {2013},
author = {Sverdlov, ED},
title = {[Molecular genetics today. Enormous advances, heavy problems, great expectations. The review is devoted to the 30th anniversary of Journal].},
journal = {Molekuliarnaia genetika, mikrobiologiia i virusologiia},
volume = {},
number = {1},
pages = {5-13},
pmid = {23785784},
issn = {0208-0613},
mesh = {Epigenesis, Genetic ; Genome, Human ; Genomics/methods/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/history/*methods ; Neoplasms/genetics ; Systems Biology ; Transcriptome ; },
}
@article {pmid23768998,
year = {2013},
author = {Orth, K},
title = {An interview with Kim Orth.},
journal = {Trends in biochemical sciences},
volume = {38},
number = {7},
pages = {331-332},
doi = {10.1016/j.tibs.2013.05.002},
pmid = {23768998},
issn = {0968-0004},
mesh = {Bacterial Proteins/genetics/metabolism ; Biochemistry/education/*history ; Career Choice ; Gram-Negative Bacteria/pathogenicity ; Gram-Positive Bacteria/pathogenicity ; History, 21st Century ; Host-Pathogen Interactions ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/education/*history ; United States ; Virulence ; Virulence Factors/genetics/metabolism ; },
}
@article {pmid23754394,
year = {2013},
author = {Mellars, P and Gori, KC and Carr, M and Soares, PA and Richards, MB},
title = {Genetic and archaeological perspectives on the initial modern human colonization of southern Asia.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {110},
number = {26},
pages = {10699-10704},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1306043110},
pmid = {23754394},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Africa/ethnology ; Anthropology, Cultural/history ; Archaeology/*history ; Asia ; DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics ; History, Ancient ; Human Migration/*history ; Humans ; *Models, Genetic ; Phylogeography/history ; },
abstract = {It has been argued recently that the initial dispersal of anatomically modern humans from Africa to southern Asia occurred before the volcanic "supereruption" of the Mount Toba volcano (Sumatra) at ∼74,000 y before present (B.P.)-possibly as early as 120,000 y B.P. We show here that this "pre-Toba" dispersal model is in serious conflict with both the most recent genetic evidence from both Africa and Asia and the archaeological evidence from South Asian sites. We present an alternative model based on a combination of genetic analyses and recent archaeological evidence from South Asia and Africa. These data support a coastally oriented dispersal of modern humans from eastern Africa to southern Asia ∼60-50 thousand years ago (ka). This was associated with distinctively African microlithic and "backed-segment" technologies analogous to the African "Howiesons Poort" and related technologies, together with a range of distinctively "modern" cultural and symbolic features (highly shaped bone tools, personal ornaments, abstract artistic motifs, microblade technology, etc.), similar to those that accompanied the replacement of "archaic" Neanderthal by anatomically modern human populations in other regions of western Eurasia at a broadly similar date.},
}
@article {pmid23741755,
year = {2013},
author = {Wallace, SS},
title = {Personal reflections of a woman scientist growing up in a man’s world.},
journal = {DNA repair},
volume = {12},
number = {5},
pages = {313-325},
pmid = {23741755},
issn = {1568-7856},
mesh = {DNA Repair ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Interpersonal Relations ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23733847,
year = {2013},
author = {Kaback, DB},
title = {The modest beginnings of one genome project.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {194},
number = {2},
pages = {291-299},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.113.151258},
pmid = {23733847},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Chromosomes, Fungal/genetics ; Genes, Essential ; Genetics, Microbial/history ; *Genome, Fungal ; Genomics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Physical Chromosome Mapping ; Saccharomyces cerevisiae/*genetics ; Sequence Analysis, DNA ; },
abstract = {One of the top things on a geneticist's wish list has to be a set of mutants for every gene in their particular organism. Such a set was produced for the yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae near the end of the 20th century by a consortium of yeast geneticists. However, the functional genomic analysis of one chromosome, its smallest, had already begun more than 25 years earlier as a project that was designed to define most or all of that chromosome's essential genes by temperature-sensitive lethal mutations. When far fewer than expected genes were uncovered, the relatively new field of molecular cloning enabled us and indeed, the entire community of yeast researchers to approach this problem more definitively. These studies ultimately led to cloning, genomic sequencing, and the production and phenotypic analysis of the entire set of knockout mutations for this model organism as well as a better concept of what defines an essential function, a wish fulfilled that enables this model eukaryote to continue at the forefront of research in modern biology.},
}
@article {pmid23732212,
year = {2013},
author = {Martínez Picabea de Giorgiutti, E},
title = {[The unusual attire of Dr. Lejeune].},
journal = {Medicina},
volume = {73},
number = {3},
pages = {286-287},
pmid = {23732212},
issn = {0025-7680},
mesh = {France ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; },
}
@article {pmid23724903,
year = {2013},
author = {Casanova, JL and Abel, L},
title = {The genetic theory of infectious diseases: a brief history and selected illustrations.},
journal = {Annual review of genomics and human genetics},
volume = {14},
number = {},
pages = {215-243},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-genom-091212-153448},
pmid = {23724903},
issn = {1545-293X},
support = {5R01NS072381/NS/NINDS NIH HHS/United States ; 5P01AI061093/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; UL1 TR000043/TR/NCATS NIH HHS/United States ; 5R01AI089970/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; R01 NS072381/NS/NINDS NIH HHS/United States ; 268777//European Research Council/International ; U01 AI088685/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; 5U01AI088685/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; 5R37AI095983/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; R37 AI095983/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; R01 AI088364/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; P01 AI061093/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; //Howard Hughes Medical Institute/United States ; 8UL1TR000043/TR/NCATS NIH HHS/United States ; R01 AI089970/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; 5R01AI088364/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Allergy and Immunology/history ; Animals ; Communicable Diseases/*genetics/*immunology/microbiology ; Genetics/history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; },
abstract = {Until the mid-nineteenth century, life expectancy at birth averaged 20 years worldwide, owing mostly to childhood fevers. The germ theory of diseases then gradually overcame the belief that diseases were intrinsic. However, around the turn of the twentieth century, asymptomatic infection was discovered to be much more common than clinical disease. Paradoxically, this observation barely challenged the newly developed notion that infectious diseases were fundamentally extrinsic. Moreover, interindividual variability in the course of infection was typically explained by the emerging immunological (or somatic) theory of infectious diseases, best illustrated by the impact of vaccination. This powerful explanation is, however, best applicable to reactivation and secondary infections, particularly in adults; it can less easily account for interindividual variability in the course of primary infection during childhood. Population and clinical geneticists soon proposed a complementary hypothesis, a germline genetic theory of infectious diseases. Over the past century, this idea has gained some support, particularly among clinicians and geneticists, but has also encountered resistance, particularly among microbiologists and immunologists. We present here the genetic theory of infectious diseases and briefly discuss its history and the challenges encountered during its emergence in the context of the apparently competing but actually complementary microbiological and immunological theories. We also illustrate its recent achievements by highlighting inborn errors of immunity underlying eight life-threatening infectious diseases of children and young adults. Finally, we consider the far-reaching biological and clinical implications of the ongoing human genetic dissection of severe infectious diseases.},
}
@article {pmid23721659,
year = {2013},
author = {Iozzo, RV},
title = {A giant of matrix biology: a celebration of Dick Heinegård's life.},
journal = {Matrix biology : journal of the International Society for Matrix Biology},
volume = {32},
number = {5},
pages = {215-219},
doi = {10.1016/j.matbio.2013.05.002},
pmid = {23721659},
issn = {1569-1802},
mesh = {Animals ; Glycomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Proteoglycans/*chemistry/genetics/metabolism ; },
}
@article {pmid23716665,
year = {2013},
author = {Kucherlapati, R},
title = {Francis H. Ruddle (1929-2013): a pioneer in human gene mapping.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {110},
number = {24},
pages = {9619-9620},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1308094110},
pmid = {23716665},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Chromosome Mapping/*history ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Hybrid Cells/metabolism ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23710523,
year = {2013},
author = {Blow, N},
title = {History lessons.},
journal = {BioTechniques},
volume = {54},
number = {4},
pages = {179},
pmid = {23710523},
issn = {1940-9818},
mesh = {Brain/physiology ; *Brain Mapping/economics/methods ; Genome ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/economics/*history ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid23706915,
year = {2013},
author = {Gannett, L},
title = {Theodosius Dobzhansky and the genetic race concept.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {44},
number = {3},
pages = {250-261},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2013.04.009},
pmid = {23706915},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; Continental Population Groups/*genetics ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; United States ; },
abstract = {The use of 'race' as a proxy for population structure in the genetic mapping of complex traits has provoked controversy about its legitimacy as a category for biomedical research, given its social and political connotations. The controversy has reignited debates among scientists and philosophers of science about whether there is a legitimate biological concept of race. This paper examines the genetic race concept as it developed historically in the work of Theodosius Dobzhansky from the 1930s to 1950s. Dobzhansky's definitions of race changed over this time from races as 'arrays of forms' or 'clusters' in 1933-1939, to races as genetically distinct geographical populations in 1940-1946, to races as genetically distinct 'Mendelian populations' in 1947-1955. Dobzhansky responded to nominalist challenges by appealing to the biological reality of race as a process. This response came into tension with the object ontology of race that was implied by Dobzhansky's increasingly holistic treatment of Mendelian populations, a tension, the paper argues, he failed to appreciate or resolve.},
}
@article {pmid23704565,
year = {2013},
author = {Shapiro, L and Losick, R},
title = {Retrospective. Francois Jacob (1920-2013).},
journal = {Science (New York, N.Y.)},
volume = {340},
number = {6135},
pages = {939},
doi = {10.1126/science.1239975},
pmid = {23704565},
issn = {1095-9203},
mesh = {DNA/genetics ; France ; *Gene Expression Regulation ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Nobel Prize ; Protein Biosynthesis ; },
}
@article {pmid23698437,
year = {2013},
author = {Morange, M},
title = {François Jacob (1920-2013).},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {497},
number = {7450},
pages = {440},
doi = {10.1038/497440a},
pmid = {23698437},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {Animals ; Conjugation, Genetic ; France ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Mice ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Nobel Prize ; Operon/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid23676746,
year = {2013},
author = {Milligan, I},
title = {Archives: preserve our digital heritage.},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {497},
number = {7449},
pages = {317},
doi = {10.1038/497317b},
pmid = {23676746},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {*Archives ; Human Genome Project/*history ; Humans ; Science/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid23675587,
year = {2013},
author = {},
title = {Special Issue on A Clinical and Molecular Immunology Symposium in Honour of Dr DC Kilpatrick.},
journal = {Molecular immunology},
volume = {55},
number = {1},
pages = {1-104},
pmid = {23675587},
issn = {1872-9142},
mesh = {Allergy and Immunology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid23671307,
year = {2013},
author = {Ambros, V},
title = {Victor Ambros: the broad scope of microRNAs. Interview by Caitlin Sedwick.},
journal = {The Journal of cell biology},
volume = {201},
number = {4},
pages = {492-493},
doi = {10.1083/jcb.2014pi},
pmid = {23671307},
issn = {1540-8140},
mesh = {Animals ; Biomarkers ; Caenorhabditis elegans/*physiology ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; MicroRNAs/genetics/*physiology ; },
}
@article {pmid23669465,
year = {2013},
author = {Pablo Razeto-Barry, },
title = {Complexity, adaptive complexity and the Creative View of natural selection.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {44},
number = {3},
pages = {312-315},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2013.04.001},
pmid = {23669465},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Genetics, Population/*history ; *Models, Genetic ; *Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {In this paper, I respond to arguments proposed by Brunnander in this journal issue concerning my position regarding the Creative View of natural selection (Razeto-Barry & Frick, 2011). Brunnander argues that (i) the Creative View we defend does not serve to answer William Paley's question because (ii) Paley's question is "why there are complex things rather than simple ones" and (iii) natural selection cannot answer this question. Brunnander's arguments for (iii) defend a Non-creative View of natural selection (sensu Razeto-Barry & Frick, 2011). Here I claim that Brunnander's arguments for (iii) are mistaken and I also argue that even accepting (iii) we do not have to accept (i), given that statement (ii) is historically and conceptually flawed. Thus here I analyze Paley's question from a historical point of view and from a contemporary perspective in a quest for the potential conceptual relevance of Paley's question today. In this vein I argue that from a contemporary point of view statement (iii) may be correct but for different reasons than those adduced by Brunnander.},
}
@article {pmid23669398,
year = {2013},
author = {Maisonobe, M and Giglia-Mari, G and Eckert, D},
title = {DNA repair: a changing geography? (1964-2008).},
journal = {DNA repair},
volume = {12},
number = {7},
pages = {466-471},
doi = {10.1016/j.dnarep.2013.04.002},
pmid = {23669398},
issn = {1568-7856},
mesh = {*DNA Repair ; Genetic Research ; Genetics/*history/manpower/statistics & numerical data ; Geography/statistics & numerical data ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Periodicals as Topic/statistics & numerical data ; },
abstract = {This article aims to explain the current state of DNA Repair studies' global geography by focusing on the genesis of the community. Bibliometric data is used to localize scientific activities related to DNA Repair at the city level. The keyword "DNA Repair" was introduced first by American scientists. It started to spread after 1964 that is to say, after P. Howard-Flanders (Yale University), P. Hanawalt (Stanford University) and R. Setlow (Oak Ridge Laboratories) found evidence for Excision Repair mechanisms. It was the first stage in the emergence of an autonomous scientific community. In this article, we will try to assess to what extent the geo-history of this scientific field is determinant in understanding its current geography. In order to do so, we will localize the places where the first "DNA Repair" publications were signed fifty years ago and the following spatial diffusion process, which led to the current geography of the field. Then, we will focus on the evolution of the research activity of "early entrants" in relation to the activity of "latecomers". This article is an opportunity to share with DNA Repair scientists some research results of a dynamic field in Science studies: spatial scientometrics.},
}
@article {pmid23662426,
year = {2013},
author = {Abilev, SK and Glaser, VM},
title = {[Genetic toxicology: findings and challenges].},
journal = {Genetika},
volume = {49},
number = {1},
pages = {81-93},
pmid = {23662426},
issn = {0016-6758},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Toxicogenetics/*history/trends ; },
abstract = {The review highlights the history of genetic toxicology as a distinct research area, as well as the issues of genetic toxicology and development of its methodology. The strategies and testing patterns of genotoxic compounds are discussed with the purpose of identifying potential human carcinogens, as well as compounds capable of inducing heritable mutations in humans. The main achievements of genetic toxicology in the 20th century are summarized and the challenges of the 21st century are discussed.},
}
@article {pmid23662420,
year = {2013},
author = {Inge-Vechtomov, SG},
title = {[The template principle: paradigm of modern genetics].},
journal = {Genetika},
volume = {49},
number = {1},
pages = {9-15},
pmid = {23662420},
issn = {0016-6758},
mesh = {Genetic Phenomena ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; *Models, Genetic ; },
abstract = {The idea of continuity in living systems, which was initially developed in mid-19th century, reached its peak in 1928 thanks to N.K. Koltsov, who proposed the template principle in chromosome reproduction. The determination of genetic functions of nucleic acids and the advent of molecular genetics led to F. Crick's statement of the central dogma of molecular biology in 1958. This dogma became a contemporary version of the template principle (templates of the first order). The discovery of "protein inheritance" underlay the notion of steric or conformational templates (second order) for reproducing conformation in a number of proteins. The template principle supplemented by this notion claims to be the main paradigm of modern genetics.},
}
@article {pmid23660655,
year = {2013},
author = {Morange, M},
title = {What history tells us XXXI. The replicon model: between molecular biology and molecular cell biology.},
journal = {Journal of biosciences},
volume = {38},
number = {2},
pages = {225-227},
pmid = {23660655},
issn = {0973-7138},
mesh = {Bacteria/genetics ; DNA Replication ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Models, Biological ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Replicon ; },
}
@article {pmid23651759,
year = {2013},
author = {Comai, L},
title = {The passionate life of Simon Chan.},
journal = {Genome biology},
volume = {14},
number = {1},
pages = {103},
doi = {10.1186/gb-2013-14-1-103},
pmid = {23651759},
issn = {1474-760X},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid23651528,
year = {2013},
author = {Attar, N},
title = {Raymond Gosling: the man who crystallized genes.},
journal = {Genome biology},
volume = {14},
number = {4},
pages = {402},
doi = {10.1186/gb-2013-14-1-402},
pmid = {23651528},
issn = {1474-760X},
mesh = {Crystallography/*history ; DNA/*chemistry/genetics ; England ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; },
abstract = {On April 25th 1953, three publications in Nature forever changed the face of the life sciences in reporting the structure of DNA. Sixty years later, Raymond Gosling shares his memories of the race to the double helix.},
}
@article {pmid23651518,
year = {2013},
author = {Doolittle, WF and Fraser, P and Gerstein, MB and Graveley, BR and Henikoff, S and Huttenhower, C and Oshlack, A and Ponting, CP and Rinn, JL and Schatz, MC and Ule, J and Weigel, D and Weinstock, GM},
title = {Sixty years of genome biology.},
journal = {Genome biology},
volume = {14},
number = {4},
pages = {113},
doi = {10.1186/gb-2013-14-4-113},
pmid = {23651518},
issn = {1474-760X},
support = {MC_U137761446//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Genome, Human ; Genomics/*history/methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
abstract = {Sixty years after Watson and Crick published the double helix model of DNA's structure, thirteen members of Genome Biology's Editorial Board select key advances in the field of genome biology subsequent to that discovery.},
}
@article {pmid23650107,
year = {2013},
author = {Amemiya, CT and Wagner, GP},
title = {Francis (Frank) Hugh Ruddle (1929-2013).},
journal = {Journal of experimental zoology. Part B, Molecular and developmental evolution},
volume = {320},
number = {5},
pages = {273-275},
doi = {10.1002/jez.b.22509},
pmid = {23650107},
issn = {1552-5015},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid23649382,
year = {2013},
author = {Asadollahi, R and Asadollahi, H},
title = {Avicenna's view on medical genetics.},
journal = {Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics},
volume = {15},
number = {5},
pages = {410-411},
doi = {10.1038/gim.2013.27},
pmid = {23649382},
issn = {1530-0366},
mesh = {*Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 19th Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid23637008,
year = {2013},
author = {Buiatti, M and Longo, G},
title = {Randomness and multilevel interactions in biology.},
journal = {Theory in biosciences = Theorie in den Biowissenschaften},
volume = {132},
number = {3},
pages = {139-158},
doi = {10.1007/s12064-013-0179-2},
pmid = {23637008},
issn = {1611-7530},
mesh = {Animals ; Biological Evolution ; Biophysics/methods ; Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Life ; Models, Theoretical ; Nonlinear Dynamics ; Quantum Theory ; *Systems Biology ; },
abstract = {The dynamic instability of living systems and the "superposition" of different forms of randomness are viewed, in this paper, as components of the contingently changing, or even increasing, organization of life through ontogenesis or evolution. To this purpose, we first survey how classical and quantum physics define randomness differently. We then discuss why this requires, in our view, an enriched understanding of the effects of their concurrent presence in biological systems' dynamics. Biological randomness is then presented not only as an essential component of the heterogeneous determination and intrinsic unpredictability proper to life phenomena, due to the nesting of, and interaction between many levels of organization, but also as a key component of its structural stability. We will note as well that increasing organization, while increasing "order", induces growing disorder, not only by energy dispersal effects, but also by increasing variability and differentiation. Finally, we discuss the cooperation between diverse components in biological networks; this cooperation implies the presence of constraints due to the particular nature of bio-entanglement and bio-resonance, two notions to be reviewed and defined in the paper.},
}
@article {pmid23635780,
year = {2013},
author = {Spiegelman, B},
title = {A conversation with Bruce Spiegelman. Interviewed by Ushma Neill.},
journal = {The Journal of clinical investigation},
volume = {123},
number = {5},
pages = {1845-1846},
doi = {10.1172/JCI70257},
pmid = {23635780},
issn = {1558-8238},
mesh = {Animals ; Drug Design ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Insulin Resistance ; Molecular Biology/history ; Obesity/*metabolism ; PPAR gamma/metabolism ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23633137,
year = {2013},
author = {Noor, MA},
title = {The 2013 Novitski Prize: Jonathan Pritchard.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {194},
number = {1},
pages = {15-17},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.113.150706},
pmid = {23633137},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; Drosophila/genetics ; England ; Genetics/*history ; Genetics, Population ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Software ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23633136,
year = {2013},
author = {De Stasio, EA},
title = {The 2013 Genetics Society of America Elizabeth W. Jones Award for Excellence in Education: A. Malcolm Campbell.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {194},
number = {1},
pages = {11-13},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.113.150698},
pmid = {23633136},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Cooperative Behavior ; Genetics/*education/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ; *Societies, Scientific ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23633135,
year = {2013},
author = {Wolfner, MF and Banerjee, U},
title = {The 2013 George W. Beadle Award: R. Scott Hawley.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {194},
number = {1},
pages = {9-10},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.113.150680},
pmid = {23633135},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; Drosophila/genetics ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Societies, Scientific ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23633134,
year = {2013},
author = {Schimenti, J and Halpern, M},
title = {The 2013 Genetics Society of America Medal: Elaine A. Ostrander.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {194},
number = {1},
pages = {5-7},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.113.150672},
pmid = {23633134},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; Dogs/genetics ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Neoplasms/genetics ; *Societies, Scientific ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23622233,
year = {2013},
author = {Cobb, M},
title = {1953: when genes became "information".},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {153},
number = {3},
pages = {503-506},
doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2013.04.012},
pmid = {23622233},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {Codon ; DNA/*chemistry/*genetics ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Models, Molecular ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {In 1953, Watson and Crick not only described the double-helix structure of DNA, but also embraced the idea that genes contained a code that expresses information and thereby changed our view of life. This article traces how these ideas entered biological thinking and highlights the connections between different branches of science at the time, exploring the power of metaphor in science.},
}
@article {pmid23620876,
year = {2013},
author = {Miller, JH},
title = {My long and winding road to mutagenesis and DNA repair pathways.},
journal = {DNA repair},
volume = {12},
number = {4},
pages = {247-256},
pmid = {23620876},
issn = {1568-7856},
mesh = {*DNA Repair ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Mutagenesis ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23620521,
year = {2013},
author = {Gupta, S},
title = {Profile of Susan S. Golden.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {110},
number = {22},
pages = {8758-8760},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1305064110},
pmid = {23620521},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Biological Clocks/*physiology ; *Biological Evolution ; Cyanobacteria/genetics/*physiology ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Photosynthesis/physiology ; *Plant Physiological Phenomena ; },
}
@article {pmid23601040,
year = {2013},
author = {Emerson, B},
title = {Professor Godfrey Matthew Hewitt (1940-2013).},
journal = {Molecular ecology},
volume = {22},
number = {9},
pages = {2359-2360},
doi = {10.1111/mec.12304},
pmid = {23601040},
issn = {1365-294X},
mesh = {Animals ; Awards and Prizes ; *Biological Evolution ; Cytogenetics/history/methods ; Grasshoppers/genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Phylogeography ; },
}
@article {pmid23599921,
year = {2013},
author = {Blow, N},
title = {History lessons.},
journal = {BioTechniques},
volume = {54},
number = {3},
pages = {179},
pmid = {23599921},
issn = {1940-9818},
mesh = {Brain/*physiology ; Brain Mapping/*economics/methods ; Genome, Human ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/economics/history ; Humans ; Research/*economics/history ; Technology Transfer ; },
}
@article {pmid23598296,
year = {2013},
author = {Friedman, JM},
title = {A conversation with Jeffrey M. Friedman by Ushma S. Neill.},
journal = {The Journal of clinical investigation},
volume = {123},
number = {2},
pages = {529-530},
doi = {10.1172/JCI68394},
pmid = {23598296},
issn = {1558-8238},
mesh = {Animals ; Cholecystokinin/genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Leptin/genetics/history ; Mice ; Mice, Obese ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Obesity/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid23596855,
year = {2012},
author = {Parodi, AL},
title = {[Conferral of the title "Member Honoris Causa of the National Academy of Medicine" upon Professor Jules Hoffman].},
journal = {Bulletin de l'Academie nationale de medecine},
volume = {196},
number = {6},
pages = {1067-1069},
pmid = {23596855},
issn = {0001-4079},
mesh = {Academies and Institutes/*history ; Allergy and Immunology/*history ; Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; Drosophila Proteins/physiology ; France ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Immunity, Innate ; Molecular Biology/history ; Nobel Prize ; Toll-Like Receptors/physiology ; },
}
@article {pmid23595614,
year = {2013},
author = {Zwart, HA},
title = {From playfulness and self-centredness via grand expectations to normalisation: a psychoanalytical rereading of the history of molecular genetics.},
journal = {Medicine, health care, and philosophy},
volume = {16},
number = {4},
pages = {775-788},
doi = {10.1007/s11019-013-9482-4},
pmid = {23595614},
issn = {1572-8633},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/history ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Polymerase Chain Reaction/history ; *Psychoanalytic Interpretation ; },
abstract = {In this paper, I will reread the history of molecular genetics from a psychoanalytical angle, analysing it as a case history. Building on the developmental theories of Freud and his followers, I will distinguish four stages, namely: (1) oedipal childhood, notably the epoch of model building (1943-1953); (2) the latency period, with a focus on the development of basic skills (1953-1989); (3) adolescence, exemplified by the Human Genome Project, with its fierce conflicts, great expectations and grandiose claims (1989-2003) and (4) adulthood (2003-present) during which revolutionary research areas such as molecular biology and genomics have achieved a certain level of normalcy--have evolved into a normal science. I will indicate how a psychoanalytical assessment conducted in this manner may help us to interpret and address some of the key normative issues that have been raised with regard to molecular genetics over the years, such as 'relevance', 'responsible innovation' and 'promise management'.},
}
@article {pmid23591550,
year = {2013},
author = {Nichols, RA and Butlin, RK and Bruford, MW},
title = {Godfrey M Hewitt (1940-2013): highlights in Heredity from a career in evolutionary genetics.},
journal = {Heredity},
volume = {110},
number = {5},
pages = {405-406},
doi = {10.1038/hdy.2013.30},
pmid = {23591550},
issn = {1365-2540},
mesh = {Animal Migration ; Animals ; *Biological Evolution ; Biology ; Chimera ; Coleoptera/genetics ; DNA, Mitochondrial ; Ecosystem ; Europe ; Genetics/*history ; Grasshoppers/genetics/physiology ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Phylogeography ; Spain ; },
}
@article {pmid23591048,
year = {2013},
author = {Brunnander, B},
title = {Did Darwin really answer Paley's question?.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {44},
number = {3},
pages = {309-311},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2013.03.004},
pmid = {23591048},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Genetics, Population/*history ; *Models, Genetic ; *Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {It is commonly thought that natural selection explains the rise of adaptive complexity. Razeto-Barry and Frick (2011) have recently argued in favour of this view, dubbing it the Creative View. I argue that the Creative View is mistaken if it claims that natural selection serves to answer Paley's question. This is shown by a case that brings out the contrastive structure inherent in this demand for explanation. There is, however, a rather trivial sense in which specific environmental conditions are crucial for the rise of specific adaptations, but this is hardly what opponents of the Creative View are denying.},
}
@article {pmid23579064,
year = {2013},
author = {Masai, H},
title = {A personal reflection on the replicon theory: from R1 plasmid to replication timing regulation in human cells.},
journal = {Journal of molecular biology},
volume = {425},
number = {23},
pages = {4663-4672},
doi = {10.1016/j.jmb.2013.03.039},
pmid = {23579064},
issn = {1089-8638},
mesh = {Bacteria/*genetics ; *DNA Replication ; Disease/genetics ; Genomic Instability ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/history/trends ; *Replicon ; *Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase ; },
abstract = {Fifty years after the Replicon Theory was originally presented, detailed mechanistic insight into prokaryotic replicons has been obtained and rapid progress is being made to elucidate the more complex regulatory mechanisms of replicon regulation in eukaryotic cells. Here, I present my personal perspectives on how studies of model replicons have contributed to our understanding of the basic mechanisms of DNA replication as well as the evolution of replication regulation in human cells. I will also discuss how replication regulation contributes to the stable maintenance of the genome and how disruption of replication regulation leads to human diseases.},
}
@article {pmid23578694,
year = {2013},
author = {Vermeulen, N and Parker, JN and Penders, B},
title = {Understanding life together: a brief history of collaboration in biology.},
journal = {Endeavour},
volume = {37},
number = {3},
pages = {162-171},
doi = {10.1016/j.endeavour.2013.03.001},
pmid = {23578694},
issn = {1873-1929},
support = {095820//Wellcome Trust/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Animals ; *Aquatic Organisms ; Biological Science Disciplines/*history ; Biology/*history ; *Censuses ; *Cooperative Behavior ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/*history ; Humans ; *Interdisciplinary Communication ; },
abstract = {The history of science shows a shift from single-investigator 'little science' to increasingly large, expensive, multinational, interdisciplinary and interdependent 'big science'. In physics and allied fields this shift has been well documented, but the rise of collaboration in the life sciences and its effect on scientific work and knowledge has received little attention. Research in biology exhibits different historical trajectories and organisation of collaboration in field and laboratory - differences still visible in contemporary collaborations such as the Census of Marine Life and the Human Genome Project. We employ these case studies as strategic exemplars, supplemented with existing research on collaboration in biology, to expose the different motives, organisational forms and social dynamics underpinning contemporary large-scale collaborations in biology and their relations to historical patterns of collaboration in the life sciences. We find the interaction between research subject, research approach as well as research organisation influencing collaboration patterns and the work of scientists.},
}
@article {pmid23552936,
year = {2013},
author = {Poggio, T},
title = {Donald Arthur Glaser (1926-2013).},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {496},
number = {7443},
pages = {32},
doi = {10.1038/496032a},
pmid = {23552936},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {Biotechnology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/history ; Nobel Prize ; Physics/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23547106,
year = {2013},
author = {Pederson, T},
title = {Life, redrawn: a memoir of Carl R. Woese (1928-2012).},
journal = {FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology},
volume = {27},
number = {4},
pages = {1285-1287},
doi = {10.1096/fj.13-0401ufm},
pmid = {23547106},
issn = {1530-6860},
mesh = {*Biological Evolution ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Sequence Analysis, RNA/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23526339,
year = {2012},
author = {Sokal, RR},
title = {A sketch of my scientific autobiography.},
journal = {Human biology},
volume = {84},
number = {5},
pages = {489-505},
doi = {10.3378/027.084.0502},
pmid = {23526339},
issn = {1534-6617},
mesh = {*Classification ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Mathematics/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid23526338,
year = {2012},
author = {Barbujani, G},
title = {Walking with Robert Sokal.},
journal = {Human biology},
volume = {84},
number = {5},
pages = {481-488},
doi = {10.3378/027.084.0501},
pmid = {23526338},
issn = {1534-6617},
mesh = {*Classification ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Mathematics/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid23516695,
year = {2013},
author = {Stephenson, R and Metcalfe, NH},
title = {Drosophila melanogaster: a fly through its history and current use.},
journal = {The journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh},
volume = {43},
number = {1},
pages = {70-75},
doi = {10.4997/JRCPE.2013.116},
pmid = {23516695},
issn = {2042-8189},
mesh = {Animals ; Biomedical Research/*history ; Circadian Rhythm ; *Drosophila melanogaster ; Genetic Research/*history ; History, 18th Century ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Models, Animal ; Nervous System ; Neurodegenerative Diseases/*history ; Neurosciences/*history ; },
abstract = {Drosophila melanogaster, the common fruit fly, has been used as a model organism in both medical and scientific research for over a century. Work by Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866-1945) and his students at Columbia University at the beginning of the twentieth century led to great discoveries such as sex-linked inheritance and that ionising radiation causes mutations in genes. However, the use of Drosophila was not limited to genetic research. Experimentation with this model organism has also led to discoveries in neuroscience and neurodevelopment, including the basis of circadian rhythms. Its complex nervous system, conserved neurological function, and human disease-related loci allow Drosophila to be an ideal model organism for the study of neurodegenerative disease, for which it is used today, aiding research into diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, which are becoming more prevalent in today's ageing population.},
}
@article {pmid23500493,
year = {2013},
author = {Lewis, M},
title = {Allostery and the lac Operon.},
journal = {Journal of molecular biology},
volume = {425},
number = {13},
pages = {2309-2316},
doi = {10.1016/j.jmb.2013.03.003},
pmid = {23500493},
issn = {1089-8638},
mesh = {*Allosteric Regulation ; Biochemistry/history ; Chemistry/history ; *Gene Expression Regulation ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Lac Operon ; Microbiology/history ; Models, Biological ; Models, Molecular ; Molecular Biology/history ; },
abstract = {The ability to regulate gene expression is essential for controlling metabolic events in a cell. Proteins that function like molecular switches respond to fluctuations in the environment to maintain homeostasis. The operon model, proposed by Jacob and Monod, provides a cogent depiction for how gene expression is regulated. A molecular mechanism for the regulation followed shortly with the theory for allosteric transition. Over the past half-century, the details of the lac operon and the allosteric model have been tested using genetic, biochemical, and structural techniques. Remarkably, the principles originally put forward 50 years ago remain essentially unchanged. Models for the operon and the theory of allosteric transitions are two of the most profound discoveries of molecular biology.},
}
@article {pmid23480075,
year = {2013},
author = {Burri, A},
title = {Bringing sex research into the 21st century: genetic and epigenetic approaches on female sexual function.},
journal = {Journal of sex research},
volume = {50},
number = {3-4},
pages = {318-328},
doi = {10.1080/00224499.2012.753027},
pmid = {23480075},
issn = {1559-8519},
mesh = {Epigenomics/history/*methods/trends ; Female ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological/etiology/*genetics/history ; },
abstract = {Behavioral genetic evidence offers a useful way to disentangle some of the multifactorial etiological pathways toward the now clearly multidimensional construct of female sexual dysfunction (FSD) and has already shown its potential in providing a better understanding of the heterogeneous factors underlying FSD. Understanding the genetic basis and therefore physiologic key mechanisms of sexual function and dysfunction has the potential for improved treatments (i.e., the development of new medication) and ultimately prevention. However, genetic epidemiologic research into FSD is scarce and highlights the need for more in-depth exploration using larger samples and more accurate phenotypes. Knowledge gained from genetic studies also highlights the importance of environmental factors and gene-environment interactions in disease development and maintenance. Exploration of DNA epigenetic patterns that regulate gene expression profiles could therefore provide the missing link between epigenomic state and FSD, and as such may offer a new biological framework for the multifactorial pathoetiology underlying FSD.},
}
@article {pmid23472755,
year = {2013},
author = {Eichler, EE},
title = {2012 introduction to the Curt Stern Award: Jay Shendure.},
journal = {American journal of human genetics},
volume = {92},
number = {3},
pages = {338-339},
doi = {10.1016/j.ajhg.2012.11.019},
pmid = {23472755},
issn = {1537-6605},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid23472605,
year = {2013},
author = {Dowhan, W and Nikaido, H and Stubbe, J and Kozarich, JW and Wickner, WT and Russell, DW and Garrett, TA and Brozek, K and Modrich, P},
title = {Christian Raetz: scientist and friend extraordinaire.},
journal = {Annual review of biochemistry},
volume = {82},
number = {},
pages = {1-24},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-biochem-012512-091530},
pmid = {23472605},
issn = {1545-4509},
mesh = {Aged ; Biomedical Research/*history ; Germany ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Male ; Molecular Biology/*history ; United States ; },
abstract = {Chris Raetz passed away on August 16, 2011, still at the height of his productive years. His seminal contributions to biomedical research were in the genetics, biochemistry, and structural biology of phospholipid and lipid A biosynthesis in Escherichia coli and other gram-negative bacteria. He defined the catalytic properties and structures of many of the enzymes responsible for the "Raetz pathway for lipid A biosynthesis." His deep understanding of chemistry, coupled with knowledge of medicine, biochemistry, genetics, and structural biology, formed the underpinnings for his contributions to the lipid field. He displayed an intense passion for science and a broad interest that came from a strong commitment to curiosity-driven research, a commitment he imparted to his mentees and colleagues. What follows is a testament to both Chris's science and humanity from his friends and colleagues.},
}
@article {pmid23458875,
year = {2013},
author = {Łojkowska, E and Kosiedowski, S},
title = {Wacław Szybalski: Lwów, Gdańsk, Madison -- life of scientist and philanthropist.},
journal = {Gene},
volume = {525},
number = {2},
pages = {155-157},
doi = {10.1016/j.gene.2013.01.067},
pmid = {23458875},
issn = {1879-0038},
mesh = {Genetics, Microbial/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Hypoxanthine Phosphoribosyltransferase/genetics ; Poland ; Science/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid23444128,
year = {2013},
author = {Wilson, TE and DeMarini, DM and Dertinger, SD and Engelward, BP and Hanawalt, PC and MacGregor, JT and Smith-Roe, SL and Witt, KL and Yauk, CL and Ljungman, M and Schwartz, JL and Klein, CB},
title = {Building on the past, shaping the future: the Environmental Mutagenesis and Genomics Society.},
journal = {Environmental and molecular mutagenesis},
volume = {54},
number = {3},
pages = {153-157},
doi = {10.1002/em.21765},
pmid = {23444128},
issn = {1098-2280},
mesh = {Environmental Pollutants/*toxicity ; Genomics/*history/organization & administration/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Mutagenesis ; Mutagens/*toxicity ; Names ; Societies, Scientific/*history/organization & administration/trends ; Toxicogenetics/history/organization & administration/trends ; United States ; },
abstract = {In late 2012, the members of the Environmental Mutagen Society voted to change its name to the Environmental Mutagenesis and Genomics Society. Here, we describe the thought process that led to adoption of the new name, which both respects the rich history of a Society founded in 1969 and reflects the many advances in our understanding of the nature and breadth of gene-environment interactions during the intervening 43 years.},
}
@article {pmid23440351,
year = {2013},
author = {Darnell, JE},
title = {Reflections on the history of pre-mRNA processing and highlights of current knowledge: a unified picture.},
journal = {RNA (New York, N.Y.)},
volume = {19},
number = {4},
pages = {443-460},
doi = {10.1261/rna.038596.113},
pmid = {23440351},
issn = {1469-9001},
mesh = {Animals ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Poly A/*metabolism ; RNA Polymerase II/metabolism ; RNA Precursors/*metabolism ; *RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional ; *RNA Splicing ; },
abstract = {Several strong conclusions emerge concerning pre-mRNA processing from both old and newer experiments. The RNAPII complex is involved with pre-mRNA processing through binding of processing proteins to the CTD (carboxyl terminal domain) of the largest RNAPII subunit. These interactions are necessary for efficient processing, but whether factor binding to the CTD and delivery to splicing sites is obligatory or facilitatory is unsettled. Capping, addition of an m(7)Gppp residue (cap) to the initial transcribed residue of a pre-mRNA, occurs within seconds. Splicing of pre-mRNA by spliceosomes at particular sites is most likely committed during transcription by the binding of initiating processing factors and ∼50% of the time is completed in mammalian cells before completion of the primary transcript. This fact has led to an outpouring in the literature about "cotranscriptional splicing." However splicing requires several minutes for completion and can take longer. The RNAPII complex moves through very long introns and also through regions dense with alternating exons and introns at an average rate of ∼3 kb per min and is, therefore, not likely detained at each splice site for more than a few seconds, if at all. Cleavage of the primary transcript at the 3' end and polyadenylation occurs within 30 sec or less at recognized polyA sites, and the majority of newly polyadenylated pre-mRNA molecules are much larger than the average mRNA. Finally, it seems quite likely that the nascent RNA most often remains associated with the chromosomal locus being transcribed until processing is complete, possibly acquiring factors related to the transport of the new mRNA to the cytoplasm.},
}
@article {pmid23408008,
year = {2013},
author = {Esposito, M},
title = {Heredity, development and evolution: the unmodern synthesis of E.S. Russell.},
journal = {Theory in biosciences = Theorie in den Biowissenschaften},
volume = {132},
number = {3},
pages = {165-180},
doi = {10.1007/s12064-013-0177-4},
pmid = {23408008},
issn = {1611-7530},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biological Evolution ; Developmental Biology/*history ; Europe ; Genetics/*history ; Heredity ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Selection, Genetic ; },
abstract = {In 1930, while R.A. Fisher, J.B.S. Haldane, E.B. Ford and S.G. Wright were laying the foundations of what a decade later J.S. Huxley dubbed "Modern Synthesis", E.S. Russell published a groundbreaking work, The Interpretation of Development and Heredity. In this book Russell not only condemned Mendelian genetics and neo-Darwinism, but also proposed an alternative synthesis unifying heredity, development, and evolution. The book did not represent the work of a mind operating in isolation. Rather, it was a synthetic work connecting ideas and doctrines of many influential scientists working in Europe and the USA. Through the analysis of archival documents and rarely or never mentioned sources, this article provides an unconventional picture of Russell's theoretical biology. It will be shown that Russell was an international celebrity; he was at the centre of a large network of scholars who shared his ideas and insights. He was one of several biologists arguing for a different synthesis; a synthesis perhaps less visible, less institutionalised, and less 'modern', nevertheless with its influential advocates and international support. Finally, this study shows that Russell's synthesis was not rooted in the classic pantheon of towering figures in the history of biology, i.e. Darwin, Wallace, and Mendel, but was based on the teachings of Kant, Goethe, Cuvier, von Baer, and Müller.},
}
@article {pmid23401957,
year = {2012},
author = {Pomelova, MA},
title = {[N.K. Kol'tsov and experimental embryology (dedicated to the 140th anniversary of his birth)].},
journal = {Ontogenez},
volume = {43},
number = {6},
pages = {401-404},
pmid = {23401957},
issn = {0475-1450},
mesh = {Animals ; Cytogenetics/*history ; Embryology/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Russia (Pre-1917) ; USSR ; },
abstract = {It is common knowledge that the majority ofN.K. Kol'tsov's studies investigated the structure of a cell through the methods of physical chemistry and cytogenetics. At the same time, Kol'tsov was also interested in the development of experimental biology, specifically experimental embryology.},
}
@article {pmid23346594,
year = {2012},
author = {},
title = {Special issue in honor of Professor Rudolf Geyer on the occasion of the 65th birthday.},
journal = {Biological chemistry},
volume = {393},
number = {8},
pages = {659-839},
pmid = {23346594},
issn = {1437-4315},
mesh = {Germany ; Glycomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid23346576,
year = {2012},
author = {Laudet, V},
title = {Vincent Laudet.},
journal = {Current biology : CB},
volume = {22},
number = {23},
pages = {R984-5},
pmid = {23346576},
issn = {1879-0445},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biological Evolution ; Genetics, Population/education/*history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Metamorphosis, Biological ; Molecular Biology/education/*history/trends ; Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid23336993,
year = {2013},
author = {Coleman, DV},
title = {Professor Leopold G. Koss (born 1920 died 11 September 2012): in memoriam.},
journal = {Cytopathology : official journal of the British Society for Clinical Cytology},
volume = {24},
number = {1},
pages = {5-6},
doi = {10.1111/cyt.12043},
pmid = {23336993},
issn = {1365-2303},
mesh = {Cytogenetics/*history/methods ; England ; France ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Medicine ; Neoplasms/*pathology ; Pathology, Clinical/*history ; Pathology, Molecular/history ; Switzerland ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23336992,
year = {2013},
author = {Herbert, A},
title = {Leopold G. Koss: a tribute to his life and work.},
journal = {Cytopathology : official journal of the British Society for Clinical Cytology},
volume = {24},
number = {1},
pages = {3-4},
doi = {10.1111/cyt.12041},
pmid = {23336992},
issn = {1365-2303},
mesh = {Cytogenetics/*history/methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Medicine ; Neoplasms/*pathology ; Pathology, Clinical/*history ; Pathology, Molecular/history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23325807,
year = {2013},
author = {Giegé, R},
title = {Fifty years excitement with science: recollections with and without tRNA.},
journal = {The Journal of biological chemistry},
volume = {288},
number = {9},
pages = {6679-6687},
doi = {10.1074/jbc.X113.453894},
pmid = {23325807},
issn = {1083-351X},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; *RNA, Transfer ; },
}
@article {pmid23316570,
year = {2012},
author = {Morange, M},
title = {The recent evolution of the question "What is life"?.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {34},
number = {3},
pages = {425-36; discussion 436-8},
pmid = {23316570},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Animals ; Chemistry, Physical/*history ; Exobiology/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Life ; Molecular Biology/*history ; *Origin of Life ; Synthetic Biology/*history ; *Vitalism ; },
abstract = {The question "What is life?" is absent from the writings of present-day biologists and scientists. However, an answer to this question, even if only partial, is needed for successful completion of projects in astrobiology and synthetic biology. The reasons for this absence are metaphysical, epistemological, and historical. No one has a full answer to this question, but there are many good reasons to keep posing it. Answers are no longer sought in the existence of strengths or mechanisms specific to life. The secret of life has been unveiled and it is nothing other than physical chemistry. What remains to be understood is the way the characteristics of organisms have emerged and been combined within one unique "object." The answer to the question "What is life?" is now looked for in the scenario that generated life.},
}
@article {pmid23316567,
year = {2012},
author = {Falk, R and Lazcano, A},
title = {The forgotten dispute: A.I. Oparin and H.J. Muller on the origin of life.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {34},
number = {3},
pages = {373-390},
pmid = {23316567},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biological Evolution ; *DNA Replication ; *Evolution, Molecular ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; *Origin of Life ; Russia ; United States ; Viruses/*genetics ; },
abstract = {The debate between A.I. Oparin's heterotrophic proposal of the origin of life and H.J. Muller's suggestion that what may be considered a posteriori the beginning of life, was an autocatalytic, replicative gene, is analyzed. Although both recognized that what was needed was an interacting system contiguous in space and time, it is now rarely mentioned that this scientific confrontation went on for several decades against the background of intense ideological issues, political tensions, and scientific developments that include the rise and demise of Lysenkoism, on the one hand, and, on the other, the establishment of neoDarwinism and the birth of molecular biology. Whereas for Oparin life was the outcome of the step-wise slow process of precellular evolution in which membrane-bounded polymolecular systems played a key role, Muller argued that life started with the appearance of the first nucleic-acid (DNA) molecule in the primitive oceans. Oparin and Muller came from different scientific backgrounds and almost opposite intellectual traditions, so their common interest in the origin of life did nothing to assuage their opposing views, which as argued soon became part of the debates that took place within the framework of intense ideological confrontations.},
}
@article {pmid23315723,
year = {2013},
author = {Agrawal, GK and Sarkar, A and Righetti, PG and Pedreschi, R and Carpentier, S and Wang, T and Barkla, BJ and Kohli, A and Ndimba, BK and Bykova, NV and Rampitsch, C and Zolla, L and Rafudeen, MS and Cramer, R and Bindschedler, LV and Tsakirpaloglou, N and Ndimba, RJ and Farrant, JM and Renaut, J and Job, D and Kikuchi, S and Rakwal, R},
title = {A decade of plant proteomics and mass spectrometry: translation of technical advancements to food security and safety issues.},
journal = {Mass spectrometry reviews},
volume = {32},
number = {5},
pages = {335-365},
doi = {10.1002/mas.21365},
pmid = {23315723},
issn = {1098-2787},
support = {BB/H001948/1//Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Animals ; Food Safety/*methods ; Genomics/methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mass Spectrometry/history/*methods ; Plant Diseases/microbiology/parasitology ; Plant Proteins/*analysis/genetics ; Plants/*chemistry/genetics/microbiology ; Proteomics/history/*methods ; },
abstract = {Tremendous progress in plant proteomics driven by mass spectrometry (MS) techniques has been made since 2000 when few proteomics reports were published and plant proteomics was in its infancy. These achievements include the refinement of existing techniques and the search for new techniques to address food security, safety, and health issues. It is projected that in 2050, the world's population will reach 9-12 billion people demanding a food production increase of 34-70% (FAO, 2009) from today's food production. Provision of food in a sustainable and environmentally committed manner for such a demand without threatening natural resources, requires that agricultural production increases significantly and that postharvest handling and food manufacturing systems become more efficient requiring lower energy expenditure, a decrease in postharvest losses, less waste generation and food with longer shelf life. There is also a need to look for alternative protein sources to animal based (i.e., plant based) to be able to fulfill the increase in protein demands by 2050. Thus, plant biology has a critical role to play as a science capable of addressing such challenges. In this review, we discuss proteomics especially MS, as a platform, being utilized in plant biology research for the past 10 years having the potential to expedite the process of understanding plant biology for human benefits. The increasing application of proteomics technologies in food security, analysis, and safety is emphasized in this review. But, we are aware that no unique approach/technology is capable to address the global food issues. Proteomics-generated information/resources must be integrated and correlated with other omics-based approaches, information, and conventional programs to ensure sufficient food and resources for human development now and in the future.},
}
@article {pmid23288464,
year = {2013},
author = {Bumgarner, R},
title = {Overview of DNA microarrays: types, applications, and their future.},
journal = {Current protocols in molecular biology},
volume = {Chapter 22},
number = {},
pages = {Unit 22.1.},
doi = {10.1002/0471142727.mb2201s101},
pmid = {23288464},
issn = {1934-3647},
support = {UL1 RR025014/RR/NCRR NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Gene Expression Profiling/history/*methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/history/*methods ; Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/history/*methods ; },
abstract = {This unit provides an overview of DNA microarrays. Microarrays are a technology in which thousands of nucleic acids are bound to a surface and are used to measure the relative concentration of nucleic acid sequences in a mixture via hybridization and subsequent detection of the hybridization events. This overview first discusses the history of microarrays and the antecedent technologies that led to their development. This is followed by discussion of the methods of manufacture of microarrays and the most common biological applications. The unit ends with a brief description of the limitations of microarrays and discusses how microarrays are being rapidly replaced by DNA sequencing technologies.},
}
@article {pmid23282348,
year = {2013},
author = {Ferry, G},
title = {Scientific heritage: Science today, history tomorrow.},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {493},
number = {7430},
pages = {19-21},
doi = {10.1038/493019a},
pmid = {23282348},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {*Archives ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/*history ; Humans ; National Human Genome Research Institute (U.S.) ; Science/*history/trends ; United Kingdom ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23272601,
year = {2012},
author = {Schwartz, JH},
title = {Molecular anthropology and the subversion of paleoanthropology: an example of "the emperor's clothes" effect?.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {34},
number = {1-2},
pages = {237-258},
pmid = {23272601},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biological Evolution ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Hominidae ; Humans ; *Interprofessional Relations ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Paleontology/*history ; },
abstract = {Although the birth of "molecular systematics" may date to the turn of the twentieth century, the discipline did not gain momentum until the 1960s, when most paleoanthropologists believed that humans were distantly related to a great ape group (chimpanzee, gorilla, orangutan), within which the African apes were most closely related. From the beginning, interpretation of molecular data, initially protein immunoreactivity, conflicted with the interpretation of morphological data by favoring a human-African ape or even a human-chimpanzee relationship. As interpretations of protein sequences, DNA hybridization, and ultimately mitochondrial (mt) and nuclear (n) DNA sequences increasingly yielded a human-chimpanzee relationship, virtually all paleoanthropologists came to embrace this relationship not only as possible, but even as fact. This led to a general disparaging of morphology as being phylogenetically revealing which, in turn, sent paleoanthropologists scurrying to identify any anatomical feature or system that supported the molecular systematists' claims. The perennial problems were and remain that humans and chimpanzees share few potentially synapomorphic features and most fossils are known only from morphology. In exploring these problems, I summarize the history of morphologically and then, molecularly-based theories of human-ape relationship. I hope to make clear how this history contributed in human evolutionary studies to the subservience of paleoanthropology to molecular anthropology.},
}
@article {pmid23272600,
year = {2012},
author = {Sommer, M},
title = {Human evolution across the disciplines: spotlights on American anthropology and genetics.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {34},
number = {1-2},
pages = {211-236},
pmid = {23272600},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Animals ; Anthropology/*history ; *Biological Evolution ; Genetics/*history ; Genetics, Population/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Hominidae ; Humans ; *Interdisciplinary Studies ; *Interprofessional Relations ; United States ; },
abstract = {When thinking about human evolution across the disciplines, terms such as "anthropological genetics" or "genetic anthropology" that brazenly defy the existence of the two-cultures divide seem to promise important insights. They refer to the application of genetic techniques to the past of humankind and human groups, a fact emphasized most strongly by the expression "genetic history." Such daring linguistic alliances have been forming since 1962 when the name "molecular anthropology" was introduced in the American context. This was an opportune moment for biochemists and physical chemists to enter anthropology, because in the U.S. a rapprochement between the fields was aimed for. However, a belief in and a discourse of a hierarchy of disciplines structured along the lines of methodology and epistemic object worked as an obstacle to the achievement of transdisciplinarity. Especially the DNA-sequence, initially approached through the proxy of the protein, was regarded as the most informative historical document due to its distance from the environment and its amenability to rigorous scientific techniques. These notions had a particular power at a time when anthropology was confronted with its legacy of race science. For some, the perceived objectivity of the new molecular approaches and the neutrality of molecules would render anthropology more natural-scientific and by inference less culturally contaminated. Others, to the contrary, believed that this legacy demanded a holistic and ethically reflexive anthropology. The different perceptions thus went along with different understandings of such crucial terms as "anthropology" and "history." In the paper, I revisit interfaces between different anthropological fields in the U.S. context and suggest that the beliefs in a hierarchy of approaches as well as in a nature free from culture embodied in the DNA-sequence has worked as one of the primary obstacles to an integration of these fields.},
}
@article {pmid25643481,
year = {2013},
author = {Thomaschke, D},
title = {[Social engineers--providers--bioethicists. Human genetics experts in West-Germany and Denmark between 1950 and 1990].},
journal = {Medizinhistorisches Journal},
volume = {48},
number = {3-4},
pages = {338-368},
pmid = {25643481},
issn = {0025-8431},
mesh = {Denmark ; Ethicists/*history ; Eugenics/*history ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Germany, West ; History, 20th Century ; },
abstract = {The author compares the history of human genetics in the Federal Republic of Germany and Denmark from the 1950s to the 1980s. The paper combines a discourse analysis with the exploration of human genetics experts' subject forms along the lines of current considerations within cultural studies. In the 1950s and 1960s, human geneticists acted in close cooperation with other political, judicial and administrative expert groups. They monitored the 'overall genetic development' of the population and cautioned about 'genetic crises'. Laypersons were supposed to submit to 'objectively reasonable' behavioral patterns--to their own as well as society's benefit. In the 1970s, the experts turned into 'providers' of a 'precise, purely medical, diagnostic service'. The patients mainly appeared as 'de-personalized' sources of a common human demand for 'safe eugenic information'. In the 1980s, the demand and supply paradigm manifested psychological and ethical side effects. Human geneticists became aware of the social and historical interrelations of their research and practices. The results of this study contribute to a more complex understanding of the dominant 'individualization narrative' of human genetics history. In this context, the development in Germany and Denmark displays two complementary forms of a transnational discourse.},
}
@article {pmid24861864,
year = {2013},
author = {Mendizabal, I and Lao, O and Marigorta, UM and Kayser, M and Comas, D},
title = {Implications of population history of European Romani on genetic susceptibility to disease.},
journal = {Human heredity},
volume = {76},
number = {3-4},
pages = {194-200},
doi = {10.1159/000360762},
pmid = {24861864},
issn = {1423-0062},
mesh = {Ethnic Groups/*genetics ; European Continental Ancestry Group/*genetics ; *Genetic Predisposition to Disease ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, Ancient ; Homozygote ; Humans ; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics ; },
abstract = {OBJECTIVES: The population history of European Romani is characterized by extensive bottleneck and admixture events, but the impact of this unique demographic history on the genetic risk for disease remains unresolved.

METHODS: Genome-wide SNP data on Romani, non-Romani Europeans and Indians were analyzed. The excess of homozygous variants in Romani genomes was assessed according to their potential functional effect. We also explored the frequencies of risk variants associated with five common diseases which are present at an increased prevalence in Romani compared to other Europeans.

RESULTS: Slightly deleterious variants are present at increased frequencies in European Romani, likely a result of relaxed purifying selection due to bottlenecks in their population history. The frequencies of SNPs associated with common metabolic and cardiovascular diseases are also increased compared to their European hosts.

METHODS: Here, we focus on spatially explicit simulation, a method which takes population movements over space and time into account. We present its main principles and then describe a series of studies using this approach that we consider as particularly significant in the context of European prehistory.

RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: All simulation studies agree that ancient demographic events played a significant role in the establishment of the European gene pool; but while earlier works support a major genetic input from the Near East during the Neolithic transition, the most recent ones revalue positively the contribution of pre-Neolithic hunter-gatherers and suggest a possible impact of very ancient demographic events. This result of a substantial genetic continuity from pre-Neolithic times to the present challenges some recent studies analyzing ancient DNA. We discuss the possible reasons for this discrepancy and identify future lines of investigation in order to get a better understanding of European evolution.},
}
@article {pmid24783673,
year = {2013},
author = {van der Hout, S},
title = {Bridging the lab-field divide? The "eco" in ecological genomics.},
journal = {History and philosophy of the life sciences},
volume = {35},
number = {4},
pages = {577-598},
pmid = {24783673},
issn = {0391-9714},
mesh = {Ecology/*history/methods ; Genomics/*history/methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Metagenome ; },
abstract = {The emerging field of ecological genomics promises to bring about a marriage between ecological and laboratory-based, genomic investigations. In this paper, I will reflect on this promise by exploring how ecology and genomics are integrated in the two approaches that currently dominate this field: the organism-centred approach, focusing on individual (model) organisms, and the metagenomic approach, concentrating on (the metagenome of) entire microbial communities composed of a variety of species. I will show that both approaches have already taken some important steps in bridging the gap between genomics and ecology. Since the introduction of next-generation sequencing methodology in 2007, the organism-centred approach does not need to stick to classical model organisms like Arabidopsis anymore. Instead, it is now able to apply genomic tools to ecologically interesting species (e.g. amphibians, reptiles, birds) as well. The metagenomic approach has been able to give ecology a more prominent place in its investigations, in another way. Contrary to classical microbiology (the field from which it originates), it does not study microbial communities under controlled laboratory settings, but under nature's own conditions. However, in the marriage between genomics and ecology, genomics still appears to be the dominant partner, especially in the case of the organism-centred approach that continues to study the new ecological models in artificial lab environments. Moreover, the organism-centred and metagenomic approaches employ a gene-centred perspective in understanding critical ecological interactions, thus strengthening a reductionist rather than a holistic (systems-oriented) approach.},
}
@article {pmid23236127,
year = {2012},
author = {Ravindran, S},
title = {Barbara McClintock and the discovery of jumping genes.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {109},
number = {50},
pages = {20198-20199},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1219372109},
pmid = {23236127},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Chromosome Breakage ; Chromosomes, Plant/genetics ; DNA Transposable Elements/*genetics ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; United States ; Zea mays/genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid23224975,
year = {2013},
author = {Chan, EK and Yao, B and Fritzler, MJ},
title = {Reflections on ten years of history of, and future prospects for, GW182 and GW/P body research.},
journal = {Advances in experimental medicine and biology},
volume = {768},
number = {},
pages = {261-270},
doi = {10.1007/978-1-4614-5107-5_15},
pmid = {23224975},
issn = {0065-2598},
support = {AI47859/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States ; MOP-57674//Canadian Institutes of Health Research/Canada ; },
mesh = {Argonaute Proteins/genetics/immunology/metabolism ; Autoantibodies/*genetics/metabolism ; Autoantigens/*genetics/immunology/metabolism ; Autoimmune Diseases/*genetics/immunology/metabolism ; Female ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Male ; MicroRNAs/*genetics/metabolism ; Microbodies/*genetics/immunology/metabolism ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Protein Isoforms/genetics/immunology/metabolism ; RNA Interference ; RNA, Messenger/*genetics/metabolism ; RNA-Binding Proteins/*genetics/immunology/metabolism ; },
}
@article {pmid23224963,
year = {2013},
author = {Jain, S and Parker, R},
title = {The discovery and analysis of P Bodies.},
journal = {Advances in experimental medicine and biology},
volume = {768},
number = {},
pages = {23-43},
doi = {10.1007/978-1-4614-5107-5_3},
pmid = {23224963},
issn = {0065-2598},
support = {R37 GM045443/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Animals ; Cytoplasmic Granules/*genetics/metabolism ; Gene Expression Regulation ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; MicroRNAs/genetics/metabolism ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Protein Biosynthesis ; RNA Stability ; RNA, Messenger/*genetics/metabolism ; Ribonucleoproteins/chemistry/*genetics/metabolism ; Yeasts/*genetics/metabolism ; },
}
@article {pmid23224962,
year = {2013},
author = {Fritzler, MJ and Chan, EK},
title = {The discovery of GW bodies.},
journal = {Advances in experimental medicine and biology},
volume = {768},
number = {},
pages = {5-21},
doi = {10.1007/978-1-4614-5107-5_2},
pmid = {23224962},
issn = {0065-2598},
mesh = {Autoantibodies/genetics/*immunology/metabolism ; Autoantigens/genetics/*immunology/metabolism ; Fluorescent Antibody Technique ; HeLa Cells ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Lysosomes/genetics/metabolism/ultrastructure ; MicroRNAs/genetics/immunology/*metabolism ; Microbodies/*genetics/metabolism/ultrastructure ; Molecular Biology/*history ; RNA Interference/immunology ; RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional ; RNA, Messenger/*genetics/immunology ; RNA-Binding Proteins/genetics/*immunology/metabolism ; },
abstract = {Human autoantibodies were a key to the discovery of GW bodies and their integral protein, GW182. This publication marks the tenth anniversary of the discovery of GW182. As it turns out, the discovery of GW182 was quite timely because it coincided with the elucidation of the RNA interference (RNAi) pathway, which is now known to have a major role in post-transcriptional gene regulation. Following our publication of the essential features of GW182 in 2002, laboratories from around the world began investigations that led to the elucidation of the role of GW182 in RNAi and other pathways of mRNA processing and degradation. This chapter reviews the discovery of GW182 and the description of GWB and some of the observations that followed that still remain to be elucidated.},
}
@article {pmid23224961,
year = {2013},
author = {Chan, EK and Fritzler, MJ},
title = {Introduction: the GW body story as an example of autoantibodies with significant impacts to molecular cell biology.},
journal = {Advances in experimental medicine and biology},
volume = {768},
number = {},
pages = {1-4},
doi = {10.1007/978-1-4614-5107-5_1},
pmid = {23224961},
issn = {0065-2598},
mesh = {Argonaute Proteins/*genetics/immunology/metabolism ; Autoantibodies/*genetics/immunology/metabolism ; Autoantigens/*genetics/immunology/metabolism ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; MicroRNAs/genetics/immunology ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; *RNA Interference ; RNA-Binding Proteins/*genetics/immunology/metabolism ; },
}
@article {pmid23219868,
year = {2013},
author = {Auchus, RJ},
title = {Introduction to the 2012 Keith L. Parker memorial lecturer: Walter L. Miller, MD.},
journal = {Molecular and cellular endocrinology},
volume = {371},
number = {1-2},
pages = {2-4},
doi = {10.1016/j.mce.2012.11.016},
pmid = {23219868},
issn = {1872-8057},
mesh = {Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital/genetics ; Endocrinology/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/history ; Oxidoreductases/genetics ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23218800,
year = {2013},
author = {Kirsh, N},
title = {Tragedy or success? Elisabeth Goldschmidt (1912-1970) and genetics in Israel.},
journal = {Endeavour},
volume = {37},
number = {2},
pages = {112-120},
doi = {10.1016/j.endeavour.2012.10.001},
pmid = {23218800},
issn = {1873-1929},
mesh = {Career Choice ; Faculty/*history ; Female ; Genetic Research/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Israel ; Medical Laboratory Personnel/history ; Research Personnel/*history ; Women, Working/*history ; },
abstract = {This article introduces the reader to the life and work of Elisabeth Goldschmidt, the founding mother of the field of genetics in Israel. It concurrently strives to uncover the roots and development of genetics in Israel, tracing the crucial transition from classical Drosophila genetics to human genetics and the shift from a Germanic tradition of scientific research to an American one. Goldschmidt's personal biography is inextricably linked to the early stages of genetic research in Israel. The narrative of her life could have been a heroic and inspiring account of a female scientist who 'had it all', had its end been less tragic. Nevertheless, her life was rich, including a path of achievement and trail-blazing coupled with the joy and satisfaction she gleaned from her scientific work.},
}
@article {pmid23212897,
year = {2012},
author = {Artzt, K},
title = {Mammalian developmental genetics in the twentieth century.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {192},
number = {4},
pages = {1151-1163},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.112.146191},
pmid = {23212897},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; Cloning, Molecular ; Drosophila/genetics ; Genetics/*history ; Growth and Development/*genetics ; History, 20th Century ; Mammals/*genetics/growth & development ; Mice ; Mice, Knockout ; Mutation ; X Chromosome Inactivation ; },
abstract = {This Perspectives is a review of the breathtaking history of mammalian genetics in the past century and, in particular, of the ways in which genetic thinking has illuminated aspects of mouse development. To illustrate the power of that thinking, selected hypothesis-driven experiments and technical advances are discussed. Also included in this account are the beginnings of mouse genetics at the Bussey Institute, Columbia University, and The Jackson Laboratory and a retrospective discussion of one of the classic problems in developmental genetics, the T/t complex and its genetic enigmas.},
}
@article {pmid23193698,
year = {2012},
author = {Frisch, S},
title = {Pioneer in behavioral genetics.},
journal = {Minnesota medicine},
volume = {95},
number = {10},
pages = {8-10},
pmid = {23193698},
issn = {0026-556X},
mesh = {Genetics, Behavioral/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Minnesota ; },
}
@article {pmid23193577,
year = {2012},
author = {Claiborn, K},
title = {Gene pioneers: Donald Brown and Thomas Maniatis win the 2012 Lasker~Koshland Special Achievement Award in Medical Science.},
journal = {The Journal of clinical investigation},
volume = {122},
number = {10},
pages = {3383-3386},
pmid = {23193577},
issn = {1558-8238},
mesh = {Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; Cloning, Molecular ; District of Columbia ; Embryonic Development/genetics ; Fellowships and Scholarships/history ; Foundations/history ; Gene Expression Regulation ; Genes, rRNA ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Manuals as Topic ; Mentors/history ; Metamorphosis, Biological/genetics ; New York City ; Xenopus laevis ; },
}
@article {pmid23189332,
year = {2012},
author = {Podolsky, SH},
title = {Metchnikoff and the microbiome.},
journal = {Lancet (London, England)},
volume = {380},
number = {9856},
pages = {1810-1811},
pmid = {23189332},
issn = {1474-547X},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; *Metagenome ; Russia (Pre-1917) ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23186110,
year = {2012},
author = {Krishnan, KS and Ramaswami, M and Wu, CF},
title = {Obaid Siddiqi at 80 and neurogenetics in India.},
journal = {Journal of neurogenetics},
volume = {26},
number = {3-4},
pages = {255-256},
doi = {10.3109/01677063.2012.746168},
pmid = {23186110},
issn = {1563-5260},
mesh = {Aged, 80 and over ; *Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; India ; Male ; *Neurosciences/history ; *Research/history ; },
}
@article {pmid23151676,
year = {2012},
author = {Gojobori, J},
title = {A commentary on the history of human populations in the Japanese Archipelago inferred from genome-wide SNP data with a special reference to the Ainu and the Ryukyuan populations.},
journal = {Journal of human genetics},
volume = {57},
number = {12},
pages = {753-754},
doi = {10.1038/jhg.2012.121},
pmid = {23151676},
issn = {1435-232X},
mesh = {Asian Continental Ancestry Group/*genetics ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Genome, Human/*genetics ; *Genome-Wide Association Study ; Humans ; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/*genetics ; },
}
@article {pmid23150590,
year = {2012},
author = {Fedoroff, NV},
title = {McClintock's challenge in the 21st century.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {109},
number = {50},
pages = {20200-20203},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1215482109},
pmid = {23150590},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Chromosome Breakage ; Chromosomes, Plant/genetics ; DNA Transposable Elements/genetics ; Epigenesis, Genetic ; Genome, Plant ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/trends ; Phenotype ; Zea mays/genetics ; },
abstract = {In 1950, Barbara McClintock published a Classic PNAS article, "The origin and behavior of mutable loci in maize," which summarized the evidence leading to her discovery of transposition. The article described a number of genome alterations revealed through her studies of the Dissociation locus, the first mobile genetic element she identified. McClintock described the suite of nuclear events, including transposon activation and various chromosome aberrations and rearrangements, that unfolded in the wake of genetic crosses that brought together two broken chromosomes 9. McClintock left future generations with the challenge of understanding how genomes respond to genetic and environmental stresses by mounting adaptive responses that frequently include genome restructuring.},
}
@article {pmid23148967,
year = {2012},
author = {Toro, MA},
title = {Jim Crow: a great population geneticist.},
journal = {Journal of animal breeding and genetics = Zeitschrift fur Tierzuchtung und Zuchtungsbiologie},
volume = {129},
number = {6},
pages = {425-426},
doi = {10.1111/jbg.12015},
pmid = {23148967},
issn = {1439-0388},
mesh = {Animals ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid23140542,
year = {2013},
author = {Rajewsky, K},
title = {Years in Cologne.},
journal = {Annual review of immunology},
volume = {31},
number = {},
pages = {1-29},
doi = {10.1146/annurev.immunol.021908.132646},
pmid = {23140542},
issn = {1545-3278},
mesh = {Animals ; Antibody Formation/genetics ; B-Lymphocyte Subsets/immunology/metabolism/pathology ; Germany ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Immunity, Cellular/*genetics ; Lymphocyte Cooperation/genetics/immunology ; Molecular Biology/*history ; T-Lymphocyte Subsets/immunology/metabolism/pathology ; },
abstract = {This review describes the building and scientific activity of the Immunology Department at the Institute for Genetics in Cologne, cofounded by Max Delbrück in post-World War II Germany. The protagonist, a child of Russian emigrants, became interested in antibodies as a postdoc at the Pasteur Institute in Paris and a proponent of the antigen-bridge model of T-B cell collaboration during his early time in Cologne. He was challenged by the gap between cellular immunology and molecular genetics and profited from the advances of the latter as well as postwar economic growth in Germany. The Immunology Department became a place, and little universe in itself, where young scientists from all over the world came together to study cellular and molecular mechanisms of antibody formation. This included work on normal and malignant B cells in the human, particularly the origin of Hodgkin lymphoma, but the main focus was on B cell development and homeostasis, the germinal center reaction, and immunological memory, developing recombinase-assisted and conditional gene targeting in mice as a main technical tool.},
}
@article {pmid23138288,
year = {2012},
author = {Kelley, NJ},
title = {The New York Genome Center.},
journal = {Nature biotechnology},
volume = {30},
number = {11},
pages = {1021-1022},
doi = {10.1038/nbt.2429},
pmid = {23138288},
issn = {1546-1696},
mesh = {Genetic Research/*history ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; New York ; Organizations, Nonprofit/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid23135833,
year = {2013},
author = {Rao, DC},
title = {A conversation with professor Newton Ennis Morton.},
journal = {Genetic epidemiology},
volume = {37},
number = {2},
pages = {131-135},
doi = {10.1002/gepi.21695},
pmid = {23135833},
issn = {1098-2272},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; *Molecular Epidemiology/history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23135232,
year = {2012},
author = {, and Jinam, T and Nishida, N and Hirai, M and Kawamura, S and Oota, H and Umetsu, K and Kimura, R and Ohashi, J and Tajima, A and Yamamoto, T and Tanabe, H and Mano, S and Suto, Y and Kaname, T and Naritomi, K and Yanagi, K and Niikawa, N and Omoto, K and Tokunaga, K and Saitou, N},
title = {The history of human populations in the Japanese Archipelago inferred from genome-wide SNP data with a special reference to the Ainu and the Ryukyuan populations.},
journal = {Journal of human genetics},
volume = {57},
number = {12},
pages = {787-795},
doi = {10.1038/jhg.2012.114},
pmid = {23135232},
issn = {1435-232X},
mesh = {Asian Continental Ancestry Group/*genetics ; Chromosomes, Human/genetics ; DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics ; Ecosystem ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Genome, Human/*genetics ; *Genome-Wide Association Study ; History, Ancient ; Humans ; Phylogeny ; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/*genetics ; },
abstract = {The Japanese Archipelago stretches over 4000 km from north to south, and is the homeland of the three human populations; the Ainu, the Mainland Japanese and the Ryukyuan. The archeological evidence of human residence on this Archipelago goes back to >30 000 years, and various migration routes and root populations have been proposed. Here, we determined close to one million single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for the Ainu and the Ryukyuan, and compared these with existing data sets. This is the first report of these genome-wide SNP data. Major findings are: (1) Recent admixture with the Mainland Japanese was observed for more than one third of the Ainu individuals from principal component analysis and frappe analyses; (2) The Ainu population seems to have experienced admixture with another population, and a combination of two types of admixtures is the unique characteristics of this population; (3) The Ainu and the Ryukyuan are tightly clustered with 100% bootstrap probability followed by the Mainland Japanese in the phylogenetic trees of East Eurasian populations. These results clearly support the dual structure model on the Japanese Archipelago populations, though the origins of the Jomon and the Yayoi people still remain to be solved.},
}
@article {pmid23113330,
year = {2012},
author = {Moiseeva, IG and Romanov, MN and Nikiforov, AA and Avrutskaia, TB},
title = {[Studies in chicken genetics: commemorating the 120th anniversary of the outstanding Soviet geneticist A. S. Serebrovsky (1892-1948)].},
journal = {Genetika},
volume = {48},
number = {9},
pages = {1021-1038},
pmid = {23113330},
issn = {0016-6758},
mesh = {Animals ; Anniversaries and Special Events ; Breeding ; Chickens/*genetics ; Chromosome Mapping ; Genetic Research/history ; *Genetics, Population ; History, 20th Century ; Pedigree ; USSR ; },
abstract = {The paper highlights the research of A. S. Serebrovsky in chicken genetics, including gene mapping and inheritance of morphological traits. Genetic formulas for several breeds are presented. The data of genetic surveys for local chicken populations from 23 regions of the former Soviet Union are also reviewed. The personal data of the authors on the morphotypological characteristics of different chicken breeds are given and discussed.},
}
@article {pmid23112225,
year = {2012},
author = {Dunston, GM},
title = {A passion for the science of the human genome.},
journal = {Molecular biology of the cell},
volume = {23},
number = {21},
pages = {4154-4156},
doi = {10.1091/mbc.E12-05-0342},
pmid = {23112225},
issn = {1939-4586},
mesh = {Animals ; *Career Choice ; Columbidae ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; Genome, Human/*genetics ; History, 20th Century ; Human Genome Project ; Humans ; Polymorphism, Genetic ; *Science ; United States ; },
abstract = {The complete sequencing of the human genome introduced a new knowledge base for decoding information structured in DNA sequence variation. My research is predicated on the supposition that the genome is the most sophisticated knowledge system known, as evidenced by the exquisite information it encodes on biochemical pathways and molecular processes underlying the biology of health and disease. Also, as a living legacy of human origins, migrations, adaptations, and identity, the genome communicates through the complexity of sequence variation expressed in population diversity. As a biomedical research scientist and academician, a question I am often asked is: "How is it that a black woman like you went to the University of Michigan for a PhD in Human Genetics?" As the ASCB 2012 E. E. Just Lecturer, I am honored and privileged to respond to this question in this essay on the science of the human genome and my career perspectives.},
}
@article {pmid23099394,
year = {2012},
author = {Wong, ML},
title = {LMB Cambridge: Bureaucracy bypass let research flourish.},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {490},
number = {7421},
pages = {487},
doi = {10.1038/490487e},
pmid = {23099394},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {England ; Financing, Organized ; History, 20th Century ; Laboratories/*history ; *Molecular Biology/history ; Research/economics/*organization & administration/*standards ; },
}
@article {pmid23095204,
year = {2013},
author = {Whitfield, JB},
title = {Genetics and molecular biology in laboratory medicine, 1963-2013.},
journal = {Clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine},
volume = {51},
number = {1},
pages = {113-117},
doi = {10.1515/cclm-2012-0478},
pmid = {23095204},
issn = {1437-4331},
mesh = {Chemistry, Clinical/*history ; Clinical Laboratory Techniques/*history ; Clinical Medicine/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
abstract = {The past 50 years have seen many changes in laboratory medicine, either as causes or consequences of increases in productivity and expansion of the range of information which can be provided. The drivers and facilitators of change in relation to clinical applications of molecular biology included the need for diagnostic tools for genetic diseases and technical advances such as PCR and sequencing. However, molecular biology techniques have proved to have far wider applications, from detection of infectious agents to molecular characterization of tumors. Journals such as Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine play an important role in communication of these advances to the laboratory medicine community and in publishing evaluations of their practical value.},
}
@article {pmid23090282,
year = {2012},
author = {Jost, KL and Bertulat, B and Cardoso, MC},
title = {Heterochromatin and gene positioning: inside, outside, any side?.},
journal = {Chromosoma},
volume = {121},
number = {6},
pages = {555-563},
doi = {10.1007/s00412-012-0389-2},
pmid = {23090282},
issn = {1432-0886},
mesh = {Animals ; *Epigenesis, Genetic ; Gene Expression Regulation ; *Gene Order ; Gene Silencing ; Genetic Research/*history ; *Heterochromatin/genetics/metabolism/ultrastructure ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; },
abstract = {All cellular processes depend on the expression and repression of the right sets of genes at the right time. As each cell contains the same DNA, transcriptional and epigenetic factors have to maintain tight control over gene expression. Even a small divergence from the correct transcriptional program can lead to severe defects and even death. Having deciphered the complete linear genetic information, we need to clarify how this information is organized into the dynamic and highly heterogeneous three-dimensional space of the eukaryotic cell nucleus. Observations on the higher order organization of DNA into differentiated condensation levels date back to the early twentieth century, and potential implications of these structural features to gene expression were postulated shortly after. In particular, proximity of genes to condensed regions of heterochromatin was proposed to negatively influence their expression and, henceforward, the concept of heterochromatin as subnuclear silencing compartment emerged. Methodological advances fueled a flurry of recent studies, which only, in part, led support to this concept. In this review, we address how (hetero)chromatin structure and proximity might influence gene expression and discuss the challenges and means to unravel this fundamental biological question.},
}
@article {pmid23087917,
year = {2012},
author = {Ayala, FJ},
title = {Walter Monroe Fitch (May 21, 1929 - March 10, 2011): a memorial tribute.},
journal = {Infection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases},
volume = {12},
number = {7},
pages = {1587-1589},
pmid = {23087917},
issn = {1567-7257},
mesh = {California ; Cytochromes c/genetics/history ; *Evolution, Molecular ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Phylogeny ; Wisconsin ; },
}
@article {pmid23082325,
year = {2012},
author = {Ohta, T},
title = {Tomoko Ohta.},
journal = {Current biology : CB},
volume = {22},
number = {16},
pages = {R618-9},
pmid = {23082325},
issn = {1879-0445},
mesh = {*Evolution, Molecular ; Genetics, Population/*history ; Genomics ; History, 20th Century ; Japan ; },
}
@article {pmid23074714,
year = {2012},
author = {},
title = {Special issue in honor of David Rimoin.},
journal = {European journal of medical genetics},
volume = {55},
number = {5},
pages = {279-},
pmid = {23074714},
issn = {1878-0849},
mesh = {Animals ; Epilepsy/genetics/*history ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23072811,
year = {2012},
author = {Pickrell, JK and Patterson, N and Barbieri, C and Berthold, F and Gerlach, L and Güldemann, T and Kure, B and Mpoloka, SW and Nakagawa, H and Naumann, C and Lipson, M and Loh, PR and Lachance, J and Mountain, J and Bustamante, CD and Berger, B and Tishkoff, SA and Henn, BM and Stoneking, M and Reich, D and Pakendorf, B},
title = {The genetic prehistory of southern Africa.},
journal = {Nature communications},
volume = {3},
number = {},
pages = {1143},
doi = {10.1038/ncomms2140},
pmid = {23072811},
issn = {2041-1723},
support = {ES022577/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States ; R01 GM100233/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; F32 GM103098/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; R01 GM076637/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; HG006648/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; GM100233/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; F32 HG006648/HG/NHGRI NIH HHS/United States ; GM076637/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; DP1 ES022577/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Africa, Southern ; Cluster Analysis ; Databases, Genetic ; Ethnic Groups/genetics ; Gene Pool ; Genetics, Population/*history ; History, Ancient ; Humans ; Linkage Disequilibrium/genetics ; Models, Genetic ; Population Dynamics ; },
abstract = {Southern and eastern African populations that speak non-Bantu languages with click consonants are known to harbour some of the most ancient genetic lineages in humans, but their relationships are poorly understood. Here, we report data from 23 populations analysed at over half a million single-nucleotide polymorphisms, using a genome-wide array designed for studying human history. The southern African Khoisan fall into two genetic groups, loosely corresponding to the northwestern and southeastern Kalahari, which we show separated within the last 30,000 years. We find that all individuals derive at least a few percent of their genomes from admixture with non-Khoisan populations that began ∼1,200 years ago. In addition, the East African Hadza and Sandawe derive a fraction of their ancestry from admixture with a population related to the Khoisan, supporting the hypothesis of an ancient link between southern and eastern Africa.},
}
@article {pmid23071456,
year = {2012},
author = {Witkin, E},
title = {It was heaven: an interview with Evelyn Witkin. Interview by Jane Gitschier.},
journal = {PLoS genetics},
volume = {8},
number = {10},
pages = {e1003009},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pgen.1003009},
pmid = {23071456},
issn = {1553-7404},
mesh = {Genetics, Microbial/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; New York City ; },
}
@article {pmid23062289,
year = {2012},
author = {Johnson, W},
title = {Developmental genetics and psychopathology: some new feathers for a fine old hat.},
journal = {Development and psychopathology},
volume = {24},
number = {4},
pages = {1165-1177},
doi = {10.1017/S0954579412000624},
pmid = {23062289},
issn = {1469-2198},
support = {G0700704//Medical Research Council/United Kingdom ; //Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council/United Kingdom ; },
mesh = {Adaptation, Biological ; Developmental Biology/history ; Epigenesis, Genetic ; Gene-Environment Interaction ; Genetic Variation ; Genetics/*history ; Growth and Development/*genetics ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mental Disorders/etiology/*genetics ; Personality/*genetics/physiology ; },
abstract = {Without even knowing of their existence, Mendel discovered how genes operate when they are completely penetrant, although they rarely are, at least with respect to human personality and psychopathology; yet quantitative genetics results have conclusively demonstrated their substantial macrolevel influence. Now we need to understand just how incompletely penetrant genes make their contributions to psychopathology. Exciting new developments in molecular genetics and epigenetics provide new insight into gene action in principle but have been of limited value so far in understanding the emergence of psychopathology. Some of the most helpful postulates might come from evolutionary and developmental biology and agricultural breeding experiments. I describe the all but forgotten evolutionary mechanisms articulated by Schmalhausen, a Russian evolutionary biologist whose work was suppressed by Stalin in the 1940s. I focus on Schmalhausen's law, the observation that organisms living in conditions at the boundary of their tolerance in any one aspect of existence will be vulnerable to expression of genetic liabilities related to all other aspects of existence. I show how Schmalhausen's ideas are relevant to the results of a century-long corn-breeding experiment and the current concepts of facilitated variation and cryptic genetic variation. I then discuss the relevance of all of these to understanding genetic influences on personality and psychopathology.},
}
@article {pmid23050370,
year = {2012},
author = {Hilgartner, S},
title = {Selective flows of knowledge in technoscientific interaction: information control in genome research.},
journal = {British journal for the history of science},
volume = {45},
number = {165 Pt 2},
pages = {267-280},
pmid = {23050370},
issn = {0007-0874},
mesh = {Access to Information/*history ; Anthropology, Cultural ; Communication/*history ; Confidentiality/*history ; Genetic Research/*history ; Genome ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
abstract = {In recent years, the selective flow of knowledge has emerged as an important topic in historical and social studies of science. Related questions about the production of ignorance have also captured attention under the rubric of agnotology. This paper focuses on information control in interaction, examining how actors seek to control the flow of scientific knowledge as they interact with others, either in face-to-face encounters or in modes of communication involving circulating documents, data, materials and other entities containing knowledge. The analysis uses an ethnographic approach to study how actors work to control which knowledge becomes available to whom, when, under what terms and conditions, and with what residual encumbrances. Secrecy, for example, is not framed as an isolated, sui generis phenomenon, nor as one side of a secrecy/openness dichotomy, nor even as a pole on a secrecy/openness continuum. Instead, the analysis explores how actors manage a dialectic of revelation and concealment through which knowledge is selectively made available and unavailable to others, often in the same act. The emphasis on selective revelation highlights partial transfers of knowledge, targeted distribution, matters of timing, and the rights and encumbrances that attach to knowledge at different points in its transit. Examples are drawn from genome research, a field marked by ongoing disputes about modes of information control.},
}
@article {pmid23042362,
year = {2012},
author = {Maniatis, T},
title = {On the road from classical to modern molecular biology.},
journal = {Nature medicine},
volume = {18},
number = {10},
pages = {1499-1502},
doi = {10.1038/nm.2931},
pmid = {23042362},
issn = {1546-170X},
mesh = {Awards and Prizes ; *Cloning, Molecular ; DNA, Complementary ; Genomic Library ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Sequence Analysis, DNA ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23042361,
year = {2012},
author = {Brown, DD},
title = {Developmental biology using purified genes.},
journal = {Nature medicine},
volume = {18},
number = {10},
pages = {1496-1498},
doi = {10.1038/nm.2929},
pmid = {23042361},
issn = {1546-170X},
mesh = {Animals ; Awards and Prizes ; Biological Evolution ; Developmental Biology/*history ; Gene Expression Regulation ; *Genes ; Genes, rRNA ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Metamorphosis, Biological ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Transcription, Genetic ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23038449,
year = {2012},
author = {Bynum, W},
title = {Nobel success: What makes a great lab?.},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {490},
number = {7418},
pages = {31-32},
doi = {10.1038/490031a},
pmid = {23038449},
issn = {1476-4687},
mesh = {Animals ; Chemistry/history ; Dogs ; England ; Genetics/history ; Germany ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Laboratories/*history/*standards/trends ; Molecular Biology/*history/standards ; New York ; *Nobel Prize ; Personality ; Physics/history ; Physiology/history ; Russia ; },
}
@article {pmid23036683,
year = {2012},
author = {Shampo, MA and Kyle, RA and Steensma, DP},
title = {Sidney Altman--Nobel laureate for work with RNA.},
journal = {Mayo Clinic proceedings},
volume = {87},
number = {10},
pages = {e73},
doi = {10.1016/j.mayocp.2012.01.022},
pmid = {23036683},
issn = {1942-5546},
mesh = {Antigua and Barbuda ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; *Nobel Prize ; *Philately ; RNA/*history ; RNA, Catalytic/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid23022885,
year = {2012},
author = {},
title = {[Letters to the Editor].},
journal = {Orvosi hetilap},
volume = {153},
number = {40},
pages = {1598-1603},
doi = {10.1556/OH.2012.40M},
pmid = {23022885},
issn = {0030-6002},
mesh = {Animal Husbandry/*history ; Animals ; *Bible ; *Calcium Carbonate ; Christianity/*history ; Female ; Genetics/*history ; Humans ; Judaism/*history ; *Lakes ; Male ; Pregnancy ; *Sheep ; *Sodium Chloride ; },
}
@article {pmid23019916,
year = {2012},
author = {Zhang, NH},
title = {[Reminiscences of biochemical science in Beijing Medical College].},
journal = {Sheng li ke xue jin zhan [Progress in physiology]},
volume = {43},
number = {3},
pages = {161-163},
pmid = {23019916},
issn = {0559-7765},
mesh = {Biochemistry/*history ; China ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid23012750,
year = {2012},
author = {Thompson, LH},
title = {Losing and finding myself in DNA repair.},
journal = {DNA repair},
volume = {11},
number = {8},
pages = {637-648},
pmid = {23012750},
issn = {1568-7856},
support = {R01CA112566/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {*DNA Repair ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Texas ; },
}
@article {pmid23007303,
year = {2012},
author = {Danielpour, M and Kaback, MM},
title = {In memoriam: David L. Rimoin (1936-2012).},
journal = {Journal of child neurology},
volume = {27},
number = {10},
pages = {1353-1354},
doi = {10.1177/0883073812456426},
pmid = {23007303},
issn = {1708-8283},
mesh = {Aged ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Male ; Neurology/*history ; Pediatrics/*history ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid22994487,
year = {2012},
author = {Lengyel, P},
title = {Memories of a senior scientist: on passing the fiftieth anniversary of the beginning of deciphering the genetic code.},
journal = {Annual review of microbiology},
volume = {66},
number = {},
pages = {27-38},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-micro-010312-100615},
pmid = {22994487},
issn = {1545-3251},
mesh = {*Genetic Code ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Polyribonucleotide Nucleotidyltransferase/metabolism ; },
abstract = {2011 marked the fiftieth anniversary of breaking the genetic code in 1961. Marshall Nirenberg, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) scientist who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1968 for his role in deciphering the code, wrote in 2004 a personal account of his research. The race for the code was a competition between the NIH group and Severo Ochoa's laboratory at New York University (NYU) School of Medicine, where I was a graduate student and conducted many of the experiments. I am now 83 years old. These facts prompt me to recall how I, together with Joe Speyer, an instructor in the Department of Biochemistry at NYU, unexpectedly became involved in deciphering the code, which also became the basis of my PhD thesis. Ochoa won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1959 for discovering polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNP), the first enzyme found to synthesize RNA in the test tube. The story of how PNP made the deciphering of the code feasible is recalled here.},
}
@article {pmid22988251,
year = {2012},
author = {Lodish, HF},
title = {Translational control of protein synthesis: the early years.},
journal = {The Journal of biological chemistry},
volume = {287},
number = {43},
pages = {36528-36535},
doi = {10.1074/jbc.X112.420356},
pmid = {22988251},
issn = {1083-351X},
mesh = {Animals ; Bacteriophages/metabolism ; Cell Membrane/metabolism ; Globins/biosynthesis ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Membrane Proteins/biosynthesis ; Molecular Biology/*history/methods ; Protein Biosynthesis/*physiology ; Protein Folding ; RNA, Messenger/metabolism ; },
abstract = {For the past fifty-five years, much of my research has focused on the function and biogenesis of red blood cells, including the cloning and study of many membrane proteins such as glucose and anion transporters and the erythropoietin receptor. We have also elucidated the mechanisms of membrane insertion, folding, and maturation of many plasma membrane and secreted proteins. Despite all of this work and more, I remain extremely proud of our very early work on the regulation of mRNA translation: work on bacteriophage f2 RNA in the 1960s and on translation of α- and β-globin mRNAs in the early 1970s. Using techniques hopelessly antiquated by today's standards, we correctly elucidated many important aspects of translational control, and I thought readers would be interested in learning how we did these experiments.},
}
@article {pmid22982436,
year = {2013},
author = {Yoder, AD},
title = {The lemur revolution starts now: the genomic coming of age for a non-model organism.},
journal = {Molecular phylogenetics and evolution},
volume = {66},
number = {2},
pages = {442-452},
doi = {10.1016/j.ympev.2012.08.024},
pmid = {22982436},
issn = {1095-9513},
mesh = {Animals ; *Evolution, Molecular ; Genomics/history/*methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Lemuridae/*genetics ; Madagascar ; *Phylogeny ; Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods ; },
abstract = {Morris Goodman was a revolutionary. Together with a mere handful of like-minded scientists, Morris established himself as a leader in the molecular phylogenetic revolution of the 1960s. The effects of this revolution are most evident in this journal, which he founded in 1992. Happily for lemur biologists, one of Morris Goodman's primary interests was in reconstructing the phylogeny of the primates, including the tooth-combed Lorisifomes of Africa and Asia, and the Lemuriformes of Madagascar (collectively referred to as the suborder Strepsirrhini). This paper traces the development of molecular phylogenetic and evolutionary genetic trends and methods over the 50-year expanse of Morris Goodman's career, particularly as they apply to our understanding of lemuriform phylogeny, biogeography, and biology. Notably, this perspective reveals that the lemuriform genome is sufficiently rich in phylogenetic signal such that the very earliest molecular phylogenetic studies - many of which were conducted by Goodman himself - have been validated by contemporary studies that have exploited advanced computational methods applied to phylogenomic scale data; studies that were beyond imagining in the earliest days of phylogeny reconstruction. Nonetheless, the frontier still beckons. New technologies for gathering and analyzing genomic data will allow investigators to build upon what can now be considered a nearly-known phylogeny of the Lemuriformes in order to ask innovative questions about the evolutionary mechanisms that generate and maintain the extraordinary breadth and depth of biological diversity within this remarkable clade of primates.},
}
@article {pmid22980972,
year = {2012},
author = {McKnight, SL},
title = {Pure genes, pure genius.},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {150},
number = {6},
pages = {1100-1102},
doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2012.08.022},
pmid = {22980972},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; *Cloning, Molecular ; *Genetic Techniques ; Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history/*methods ; United States ; },
abstract = {The 2012 Albert Lasker Special Achievement Award in Medical Science will be shared by Donald Brown and Tom Maniatis for their scientific work leading to the purification and study of single genes by physical and molecular biological methodologies. Brown and Maniatis are also recognized for their extraordinary commitment and generosity in promoting the careers of young scientists. The impact of these accomplishments has transformed biological and medical science over the past four decades.},
}
@article {pmid22977908,
year = {2012},
author = {},
title = {Special issue dedicated to Devi Subba Rao.},
journal = {Mechanisms of ageing and development},
volume = {133},
number = {4},
pages = {v-vi; 107-213},
pmid = {22977908},
issn = {1872-6216},
mesh = {Aging/*genetics ; Animals ; Brain/*physiology ; *DNA Repair ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid22973609,
year = {2012},
author = {Mirelman, D and Bayer, EA and Reisner, Y},
title = {Nathan Sharon: 1925-2011.},
journal = {Advances in carbohydrate chemistry and biochemistry},
volume = {67},
number = {},
pages = {2-18},
pmid = {22973609},
issn = {2162-5530},
mesh = {Animals ; Biobibliography as Topic ; Bone Marrow Transplantation/history ; Cell Separation/history ; Glycomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Israel ; Lymphocyte Depletion ; Plant Lectins/chemistry/history ; Soybean Proteins/chemistry/history ; },
}
@article {pmid22969026,
year = {2012},
author = {Orchard, S and Binz, PA and Borchers, C and Gilson, MK and Jones, AR and Nicola, G and Vizcaino, JA and Deutsch, EW and Hermjakob, H},
title = {Ten years of standardizing proteomic data: a report on the HUPO-PSI Spring Workshop: April 12-14th, 2012, San Diego, USA.},
journal = {Proteomics},
volume = {12},
number = {18},
pages = {2767-2772},
doi = {10.1002/pmic.201270126},
pmid = {22969026},
issn = {1615-9861},
support = {R01 GM070064/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Guidelines as Topic ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mass Spectrometry/history/standards ; Proteome/history/*standards ; Proteomics/*education/history/*standards ; United States ; },
abstract = {The Human Proteome Organisation Proteomics Standards Initiative (HUPO-PSI) was established in 2002 with the aim of defining community standards for data representation in proteomics and facilitating data comparison, exchange and verification. Over the last 10 years significant advances have been made, with common data standards now published and implemented in the field of both mass spectrometry and molecular interactions. The 2012 meeting further advanced this work, with the mass spectrometry groups finalising approaches to capturing the output from recent developments in the field, such as quantitative proteomics and SRM. The molecular interaction group focused on improving the integration of data from multiple resources. Both groups united with a guest work track, organized by the HUPO Technology/Standards Committee, to formulate proposals for data submissions from the HUPO Human Proteome Project and to start an initiative to collect standard experimental protocols.},
}
@article {pmid22964834,
year = {2012},
author = {Edwards, AW},
title = {Reginald Crundall Punnett: first Arthur Balfour Professor of Genetics, Cambridge, 1912.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {192},
number = {1},
pages = {3-13},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.112.143552},
pmid = {22964834},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; Genetic Linkage ; Genetics/*history ; Genetics, Population/history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; United Kingdom ; },
abstract = {R. C. Punnett, the codiscoverer of linkage with W. Bateson in 1904, had the good fortune to be invited to be the first Arthur Balfour Professor of Genetics at Cambridge University, United Kingdom, in 1912 when Bateson, for whom it had been intended, declined to leave his new appointment as first Director of the John Innes Horticultural Institute. We here celebrate the centenary of the first professorship dedicated to genetics, outlining Punnett's career and his scientific contributions, with special reference to the discovery of "partial coupling" in the sweet pea (later "linkage") and to the diagram known as Punnett's square. His seeming reluctance as coauthor with Bateson to promote the reduplication hypothesis to explain the statistical evidence for linkage is stressed, as is his relationship with his successor as Arthur Balfour Professor, R. A. Fisher. The background to the establishment of the Professorship is also described.},
}
@article {pmid22955814,
year = {2012},
author = {Pennisi, E},
title = {Profile: Ewan Birney. Genomics' big talker.},
journal = {Science (New York, N.Y.)},
volume = {337},
number = {6099},
pages = {1167-1169},
doi = {10.1126/science.337.6099.1167},
pmid = {22955814},
issn = {1095-9203},
mesh = {*Computational Biology/history ; England ; *Genome, Human ; *Genomics/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Human Genome Project/history ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid22949610,
year = {2012},
author = {Koseki, H},
title = {An interview with Haruhiko Koseki. Interviewed by Eva Amsen.},
journal = {Development (Cambridge, England)},
volume = {139},
number = {19},
pages = {3469-3470},
doi = {10.1242/dev.087700},
pmid = {22949610},
issn = {1477-9129},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biomedical Research/economics/history/methods/trends ; *Developmental Biology/history/methods/trends ; Europe ; *Genetics/economics/history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Japan ; Mice ; Models, Animal ; },
}
@article {pmid22948037,
year = {2013},
author = {Carlson, EA},
title = {H.J. Muller's contributions to mutation research.},
journal = {Mutation research},
volume = {752},
number = {1},
pages = {1-5},
doi = {10.1016/j.mrrev.2012.08.003},
pmid = {22948037},
issn = {0027-5107},
mesh = {Biological Evolution ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; *Mutation ; Radiation Genetics/history ; Research ; United States ; },
abstract = {H. J. Muller is best known for his Nobel Prize work on the induction of mutations by ionizing radiation. Geneticists are less familiar with his contributions to mutation and how he related the process of mutagenesis to the gene and distinguished gene mutations from other genetic and epigenetic events such as polyploidy, chromosome rearrangements, and position effects. The hallmark of Muller's contributions is his design of genetic stocks to solve genetic problems and allow experimentation to reveal new phenomena. In this review I relate Muller's personality to his teaching and research and present a history of Muller's ideas on mutation from his first days in Morgan's fly lab to his final thoughts on what became called "Muller's ratchet", a term he did not get to enjoy because it was coined seven years after his death.},
}
@article {pmid22944670,
year = {2012},
author = {Wuhrer, M and Horstkorte, R},
title = {Highlight: dolce vita--a sample from European glycobiology.},
journal = {Biological chemistry},
volume = {393},
number = {8},
pages = {659},
doi = {10.1515/hsz-2012-0232},
pmid = {22944670},
issn = {1437-4315},
mesh = {Carbohydrates/*analysis ; Germany ; Glycoconjugates/*chemistry ; Glycomics/history/*methods ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid22927311,
year = {2012},
author = {Martins-de-Souza, D},
title = {Brazil: the country of proteomics.},
journal = {Proteomics},
volume = {12},
number = {17},
pages = {2599-2600},
doi = {10.1002/pmic.201270114},
pmid = {22927311},
issn = {1615-9861},
mesh = {Brazil ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mass Spectrometry/economics/history/methods ; Proteomics/*education/history/*methods ; },
}
@article {pmid22925677,
year = {2012},
author = {Tanner, W and Lehle, L},
title = {More than 40 years of glycobiology in Regensburg.},
journal = {Biochemical and biophysical research communications},
volume = {425},
number = {3},
pages = {578-582},
doi = {10.1016/j.bbrc.2012.08.001},
pmid = {22925677},
issn = {1090-2104},
mesh = {Animals ; Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation/genetics/*history/metabolism ; Drosophila melanogaster/metabolism ; Germany ; Glycomics/*history ; Glycosylation ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Mannose/chemistry/metabolism ; Proteins/chemistry/*metabolism ; Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism ; },
}
@article {pmid22925664,
year = {2012},
author = {Lennarz, W},
title = {An interview by Dr. Ernesto Carafoli with, Editor-in-Chief of Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications (BBRC), Dr. William Lennarz.},
journal = {Biochemical and biophysical research communications},
volume = {425},
number = {3},
pages = {495-496},
doi = {10.1016/j.bbrc.2012.08.034},
pmid = {22925664},
issn = {1090-2104},
mesh = {Animals ; Biomedical Research/history/*trends ; *Career Choice ; Fertilization ; Glycomics/history/*trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Universities/history/trends ; },
}
@article {pmid22925662,
year = {2012},
author = {Carafoli, E},
title = {Bill Lennarz. Foreword.},
journal = {Biochemical and biophysical research communications},
volume = {425},
number = {3},
pages = {493},
doi = {10.1016/j.bbrc.2012.08.035},
pmid = {22925662},
issn = {1090-2104},
mesh = {Glycomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Periodicals as Topic/*history ; Retirement ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid22907866,
year = {2012},
author = {Weiss, KM},
title = {To understand the baboon: the triumph of evolutionary methods.},
journal = {Evolutionary anthropology},
volume = {21},
number = {4},
pages = {131-135},
doi = {10.1002/evan.21317},
pmid = {22907866},
issn = {1520-6505},
mesh = {Animals ; Base Sequence ; *Biological Evolution ; Evolution, Molecular ; Genetics/*history ; History, 19th Century ; Humans ; Logic ; *Models, Biological ; Molecular Sequence Data ; Papio/genetics/*physiology ; },
}
@article {pmid22898541,
year = {2012},
author = {Vogt, PK},
title = {Retroviral oncogenes: a historical primer.},
journal = {Nature reviews. Cancer},
volume = {12},
number = {9},
pages = {639-648},
pmid = {22898541},
issn = {1474-1768},
support = {R01 CA151574/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; R01 CA078230/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; R01CA078230/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; R01CA153124/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; R01CA151574/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; R01 CA153124/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/*genetics ; Cell Transformation, Viral/*genetics ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Medical Oncology/history ; Molecular Biology/history ; Retroviridae/*genetics ; },
abstract = {Retroviruses are the original source of oncogenes. The discovery and characterization of these genes was made possible by the introduction of quantitative cell biological and molecular techniques for the study of tumour viruses. Key features of all retroviral oncogenes were first identified in src, the oncogene of Rous sarcoma virus. These include non-involvement in viral replication, coding for a single protein and cellular origin. The MYC, RAS and ERBB oncogenes quickly followed SRC, and these together with PI3K are now recognized as crucial driving forces in human cancer.},
}
@article {pmid22891344,
year = {2012},
author = {Trivedi, BP},
title = {Profile of Nancy L. Craig.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {109},
number = {36},
pages = {14283-14284},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1212357109},
pmid = {22891344},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Career Choice ; Crystallography/methods ; DNA Transposable Elements/*genetics ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Transposases/*chemistry ; },
}
@article {pmid22886071,
year = {2012},
author = {Sankaran, N},
title = {How the discovery of ribozymes cast RNA in the roles of both chicken and egg in origin-of-life theories.},
journal = {Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences},
volume = {43},
number = {4},
pages = {741-750},
doi = {10.1016/j.shpsc.2012.06.002},
pmid = {22886071},
issn = {1879-2499},
mesh = {Catalysis ; *Evolution, Molecular ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; History, Ancient ; *Life ; Molecular Biology/*history ; RNA/chemistry/*history ; RNA, Catalytic/*history ; },
abstract = {Scientific theories about the origin-of-life theories have historically been characterized by the chicken-and-egg problem of which essential aspect of life was the first to appear, replication or self-sustenance. By the 1950s the question was cast in molecular terms and DNA and proteins had come to represent the carriers of the two functions. Meanwhile, RNA, the other nucleic acid, had played a capricious role in origin theories. Because it contained building blocks very similar to DNA, biologists recognized early that RNA could store information in its linear sequences. With the discovery in the 1980s that RNA molecules were capable of biological catalysis, a function hitherto ascribed to proteins alone, RNA took on the role of the single entity that could act as both chicken and egg. Within a few years of the discovery of these catalytic RNAs (ribozymes) scientists had formulated an RNA World hypothesis that posited an early phase in the evolution of life where all key functions were performed by RNA molecules. This paper traces the history the role of RNA in origin-of-life theories with a focus on how the discovery of ribozymes influenced the discourse.},
}
@article {pmid22870514,
year = {2012},
author = {Sekiguchi, M},
title = {My path toward DNA repair.},
journal = {DNA repair},
volume = {11},
number = {7},
pages = {606-615},
pmid = {22870514},
issn = {1568-7856},
mesh = {*DNA Repair ; Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Japan ; },
}
@article {pmid22870513,
year = {2012},
author = {Linn, S},
title = {Life in the serendipitous lane: excitement and gratification in studying DNA repair.},
journal = {DNA repair},
volume = {11},
number = {7},
pages = {595-605},
pmid = {22870513},
issn = {1568-7856},
mesh = {Biochemistry/history ; California ; DNA Damage ; *DNA Repair ; History, 20th Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid22864850,
year = {2012},
author = {Gu, J},
title = {Development of glycoscience in China.},
journal = {Glycoconjugate journal},
volume = {29},
number = {5-6},
pages = {239-240},
doi = {10.1007/s10719-012-9430-1},
pmid = {22864850},
issn = {1573-4986},
mesh = {Animals ; China ; Glycomics/*history/methods/organization & administration ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid22863889,
year = {2012},
author = {Vincent, T},
title = {In memory of Professor Ralf Pettersson (1945-2011) and Professor Lennart Philipson (1929-2011).},
journal = {Seminars in cancer biology},
volume = {22},
number = {5-6},
pages = {359-488},
doi = {10.1016/j.semcancer.2012.07.002},
pmid = {22863889},
issn = {1096-3650},
mesh = {Cell Biology/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Neoplasms/*history ; Sweden ; },
}
@article {pmid22862876,
year = {2012},
author = {Shampo, MA and Kyle, RA and Steensma, DP},
title = {Catherine Verfaillie--stem cell researcher.},
journal = {Mayo Clinic proceedings},
volume = {87},
number = {8},
pages = {e59},
doi = {10.1016/j.mayocp.2012.05.013},
pmid = {22862876},
issn = {1942-5546},
mesh = {Belgium ; Cell Differentiation ; Faculty, Medical/*history ; Female ; Genetics/*history ; Hematology/*history ; *Hematopoietic Stem Cells ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Minnesota ; Philately ; },
}
@article {pmid22860256,
year = {2012},
author = {},
title = {Special Issue on Pharmacogenetics is dedicated to the memory of Professor Robert W Kerwin.},
journal = {Journal of psychopharmacology (Oxford, England)},
volume = {26},
number = {3},
pages = {333-428},
pmid = {22860256},
issn = {1461-7285},
mesh = {Animals ; England ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Pharmacogenetics/*history ; Psychiatry/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid22860251,
year = {2012},
author = {},
title = {Special issue in honor of Yoshiki Hotta.},
journal = {Journal of neurogenetics},
volume = {26},
number = {1},
pages = {1-102},
pmid = {22860251},
issn = {1563-5260},
mesh = {History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Japan ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Neurosciences/*history ; },
}
@article {pmid22855371,
year = {2012},
author = {Simunek, M and Hoßfeld, U and Breidbach, O},
title = {'Further Development' of Mendel's legacy? Erich von Tschermak-Seysenegg in the context of Mendelian-biometry controversy, 1901-1906.},
journal = {Theory in biosciences = Theorie in den Biowissenschaften},
volume = {131},
number = {4},
pages = {243-252},
doi = {10.1007/s12064-012-0158-z},
pmid = {22855371},
issn = {1611-7530},
mesh = {Biometry ; England ; Genetics/*history ; Heredity ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; },
abstract = {The contribution of Erich von Tschermak-Seysenegg (1871-1962) to the beginning of classical genetics is a matter of dispute. The aim of this study is to analyse, based on newly accessible archive materials, the relevance of his positions and theoretical views in a debate between advocates of early Mendelian explanation of heredity and proponents of biometry, which took place in England around 1901-1906. We challenge not only his role of an 'external consultant', which at the time de facto confirmed his status of 'rediscoverer' of Mendel's work but also analyse his ambivalent positions which are to be seen as a part of 'further development' (Weiterführung), a development of Mendel's legacy as he understood it. Second, there is an interesting aspect of establishing connections within an 'experimental culture' along the Mendel's lines of thought that was parallel to the first step of institutionalizing the new discipline of Genetics after 1905/06. Part of the study is also the analysis of contribution of his older brother Armin von Tschermak-Seysenegg (1870-1952) who--much like in the case of 'rediscovery' of 1900-1901--was for his younger brother an important source of theoretical knowledge. In this particular case, it regarded Bateson's 'Defence' of Mendel from 1902.},
}
@article {pmid22851766,
year = {2012},
author = {Hawley, RS},
title = {Profile of R. Scott Hawley. Interview by Sujata Gupta.},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
volume = {109},
number = {35},
pages = {13883-13885},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.1211580109},
pmid = {22851766},
issn = {1091-6490},
mesh = {Animals ; *Chromosome Segregation ; Cytogenetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; *Meiosis ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid22834164,
year = {2012},
author = {Akatov, VV},
title = {[60 years of the equilibrium theory of insular biogeography: problems of testing, results of the field studies, applied importance].},
journal = {Zhurnal obshchei biologii},
volume = {73},
number = {3},
pages = {163-182},
pmid = {22834164},
issn = {0044-4596},
mesh = {Animals ; *Biodiversity ; *Conservation of Natural Resources ; *Ecosystem ; Extinction, Biological ; Geography ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Phylogeography/history/*trends ; Population Dynamics ; },
abstract = {A review is presented of publications dealing with analysis of species richness of island biological communities and habitat islands based on the equilibrium theory of insular biogeography by MacArthur and Wilson (1963). Principal points of the theory are considered along with its shortcomings, problems and results of its testing. Also, possibilities are appraised for using recommendations elaborated on the base of the theory in nature conservation practice. The results of island and habitat island biota studies indicate that in many cases data corroborate the equilibrium theory while in many other cases they do not. In particular, for cenoses fragmented 50-250 years ago, especially for the ones formed by long living species, there have been no conspicuous effects of species relaxation detected. At that, the theory prediction of substantial reduction in species richness of fragmented communities in the long run is hardly disputed. The results of studies conducted in the field of insular biogeography are taken as a basis for recommendations on the long-term conservation of isolated communities integrity, although mostly they are of qualitative nature.},
}
@article {pmid22772140,
year = {2012},
author = {Bantscheff, M and Lemeer, S and Savitski, MM and Kuster, B},
title = {Quantitative mass spectrometry in proteomics: critical review update from 2007 to the present.},
journal = {Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry},
volume = {404},
number = {4},
pages = {939-965},
doi = {10.1007/s00216-012-6203-4},
pmid = {22772140},
issn = {1618-2650},
mesh = {History, 21st Century ; Mass Spectrometry/history/*methods ; Proteins/*chemistry/genetics/metabolism ; Proteomics/history/*methods ; },
abstract = {Mass-spectrometry-based proteomics is continuing to make major contributions to the discovery of fundamental biological processes and, more recently, has also developed into an assay platform capable of measuring hundreds to thousands of proteins in any biological system. The field has progressed at an amazing rate over the past five years in terms of technology as well as the breadth and depth of applications in all areas of the life sciences. Some of the technical approaches that were at an experimental stage back then are considered the gold standard today, and the community is learning to come to grips with the volume and complexity of the data generated. The revolution in DNA/RNA sequencing technology extends the reach of proteomic research to practically any species, and the notion that mass spectrometry has the potential to eventually retire the western blot is no longer in the realm of science fiction. In this review, we focus on the major technical and conceptual developments since 2007 and illustrate these by important recent applications.},
}
@article {pmid22766636,
year = {2012},
author = {Pyeritz, RE},
title = {David L. Rimoin, MD, PhD: 1936-2012.},
journal = {Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics},
volume = {14},
number = {7},
pages = {697-698},
doi = {10.1038/gim.2012.79},
pmid = {22766636},
issn = {1530-0366},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genetics, Medical/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Leadership ; },
}
@article {pmid22742498,
year = {2012},
author = {Womack, JE},
title = {First steps: bovine genomics in historical perspective.},
journal = {Animal genetics},
volume = {43 Suppl 1},
number = {},
pages = {2-8},
doi = {10.1111/j.1365-2052.2012.02382.x},
pmid = {22742498},
issn = {1365-2052},
mesh = {Animals ; Cattle/*genetics ; Chromosome Mapping/*methods ; Chromosomes, Mammalian ; Genetic Linkage ; *Genome ; Genomics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Radiation Hybrid Mapping ; },
abstract = {The vision of Morris Soller was instrumental in launching the field of bovine genomics. This study is a review of the early years of bovine gene mapping leading up to the sequencing and assembly of the bovine genome in 2009. A historical perspective of parasexual, linkage and physical mapping is provided with a focus on the contribution of these maps to the eventual assignment and orientation of genes and sequence to cattle chromosomes.},
}
@article {pmid22762396,
year = {2012},
author = {Vauthey, JN and Zimmitti, G and Shindoh, J},
title = {From Couinaud to molecular biology: the seven virtues of hepato-pancreato-biliary surgery.},
journal = {HPB : the official journal of the International Hepato Pancreato Biliary Association},
volume = {14},
number = {8},
pages = {493-499},
doi = {10.1111/j.1477-2574.2012.00502.x},
pmid = {22762396},
issn = {1477-2574},
mesh = {*Biliary Tract Surgical Procedures/history/trends ; Biomedical Research ; Cooperative Behavior ; *Digestive System Surgical Procedures/history/trends ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Information Dissemination ; Liver/anatomy & histology/blood supply/*surgery ; Mentors ; *Molecular Biology/history/trends ; Pancreas/*surgery ; Translational Medical Research ; },
}
@article {pmid22748045,
year = {2012},
author = {Maquart, FX and Borel, JP},
title = {[50 years of connective tissue research: from the French Connective Tissue Club to the French Society of Extracellular Matrix Biology].},
journal = {Biologie aujourd'hui},
volume = {206},
number = {2},
pages = {73-78},
doi = {10.1051/jbio/2012011},
pmid = {22748045},
issn = {2105-0678},
mesh = {Biomedical Research/*history/organization & administration/trends ; Cell Biology/history/organization & administration/trends ; *Connective Tissue/physiology ; *Extracellular Matrix/physiology ; France ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Knowledge ; Molecular Biology/history/organization & administration/trends ; Societies, Scientific/history/*organization & administration ; },
abstract = {The history of connective tissue research began in the late 18th century. However, it is only 50 years later that the concept of connective tissue was shaped. It took another fifty years before biochemical knowledge of extracellular matrix macromolecules began to emerge in the first half of the 20th century. In 1962, thanks to Ladislas and Barbara Robert, back from the US, the first society called "French Connective Tissue Club" was created in Paris. The first board was constituted of Albert Delaunay, Suzanne Bazin and Ladislas Robert. Very quickly, under the influence of these pioneers, national and international meetings were organized and, in 1967, a "Federation of the European Connective Tissue Clubs" was created at the initiative of Ladislas Robert (Paris) and John Scott (Manchester). It spread rapidly to the major European nations. In 1982 the transformation of "Clubs" in "Societies" occurred, a name more in line with the requirements of the time. In 2008, the "French Connective Tissue Society" became the "French Society of Extracellular Matrix Biology" ("Société Française de Biologie de la Matrice Extracellulaire", SFBMEc), to better highlight the importance of the extracellular matrix in the biology of living organisms. The SFBMEc's mission today is to promote and develop scientific exchanges between academic, industrial, and hospital laboratories involved in research on the extracellular matrix. SFBMEc organizes or subsidizes scientific meetings and awards scholarships to Ph.D. students or post-docs to participate in international conferences. It includes 200 to 250 members from different disciplines, developing strong interactions between scientists, clinicians and pathologists. It is present all around the French territory in many research laboratories. During these last 50 years, the extraordinary advances made possible by the development of new investigation techniques, in particular molecular biology, cell and tissue imaging, molecular modeling, etc., have permitted a considerable increase of the knowledge in the field of connective tissue.},
}
@article {pmid22739996,
year = {2012},
author = {Zuckerkandl, E},
title = {Fifty-year old and still ticking.... an interview with Emile Zuckerkandl on the 50th anniversary of the molecular clock. Interview by Giacomo Bernardi.},
journal = {Journal of molecular evolution},
volume = {74},
number = {5-6},
pages = {233-236},
doi = {10.1007/s00239-012-9511-6},
pmid = {22739996},
issn = {1432-1432},
mesh = {Animals ; Anniversaries and Special Events ; Europe ; *Evolution, Molecular ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Molecular Biology/*history ; Time Factors ; United States ; },
abstract = {In 1962, a young post-doctoral fellow and a prominent Nobel Prize winner, Emile Zuckerkandl and Linus Pauling, published a seminal paper that described the relationship between the average number of aminoacid replacements and divergence time, known as the molecular clock (Zuckerkandl and Pauling 1962). Fifty years after the original publication, I was fortunate enough to interview Emile Zuckerkandl. We shared thoughts on his life and the historical events that led to the discovery of the molecular clock.},
}
@article {pmid22733525,
year = {2012},
author = {Svec, F},
title = {Pier-Giorgio Righetti wins the inaugural Beckman Award.},
journal = {Journal of separation science},
volume = {35},
number = {10-11},
pages = {},
doi = {10.1002/jssc.201270074},
pmid = {22733525},
issn = {1615-9314},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Isoelectric Focusing/*history/instrumentation ; Italy ; Proteomics/*history/instrumentation ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid22709721,
year = {2012},
author = {Graham, JM and Hennekam, RC},
title = {Common causes of genetic epileptic encephalopathies.},
journal = {European journal of medical genetics},
volume = {55},
number = {5},
pages = {279-280},
doi = {10.1016/j.ejmg.2012.06.001},
pmid = {22709721},
issn = {1878-0849},
mesh = {Epilepsy/diagnosis/*genetics ; Genetics, Medical/history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; },
}
@article {pmid22702452,
year = {2012},
author = {Spackman, E},
title = {Viral diagnostics: will new technology save the day?.},
journal = {Avian pathology : journal of the W.V.P.A},
volume = {41},
number = {3},
pages = {251-258},
doi = {10.1080/03079457.2012.675051},
pmid = {22702452},
issn = {1465-3338},
mesh = {Animals ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Pathology, Molecular/*history/*methods/*trends ; Poultry ; Poultry Diseases/*diagnosis/*virology ; Specimen Handling/methods/*veterinary ; Virus Diseases/diagnosis/*veterinary ; },
abstract = {Technology for infectious agent detection continues to evolve, particularly molecular methods that first emerged in the mid-1970s. The goals of new technology in diagnostics, whether in humans or in animals, including poultry, are to achieve the highest sensitivity and specificity possible to accurately identify the infection status of an individual or flock in the shortest time possible. Ease of use, low cost and increased information from a single test (e.g. multiplexing) are also critical areas frequently targeted for improvement. New tests and modifications of current tests are reported often, and diagnostic tests are now commonly developed by commercial companies. As one would expect, most advances in diagnostic technology are applied first to human health, and then may be adapted to animal health if practical. In the present review the trends and novel innovative technologies in primarily viral diagnostics are reviewed and the practicality of these methods and application for poultry health are discussed briefly. Also, influenza will seem to be over-represented in viral diagnostics since it is frequently used as a proof-of-concept target for novel technology due to its importance for animal and public health. Finally, the review is intended to be a brief survey of some of the innovative diagnostic technologies reported in recent years. It is not entirely comprehensive of all technology and the author makes no claims or endorsements of any of the technology or products mentioned.},
}
@article {pmid22701051,
year = {2012},
author = {Janssens, FA and Koszul, R and Zickler, D},
title = {The chiasmatype theory. A new interpretation of the maturation divisions. 1909.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {191},
number = {2},
pages = {319-346},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.112.139725},
pmid = {22701051},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; },
}
@article {pmid22701050,
year = {2012},
author = {Koszul, R and Meselson, M and Van Doninck, K and Vandenhaute, J and Zickler, D},
title = {The centenary of Janssens's chiasmatype theory.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {191},
number = {2},
pages = {309-317},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.112.139733},
pmid = {22701050},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Belgium ; Cell Biology/history ; *Chromosomes ; Genetics/history ; History, 20th Century ; Meiosis/*genetics ; },
abstract = {The segregation and random assortment of characters observed by Mendel have their basis in the behavior of chromosomes in meiosis. But showing this actually to be the case requires a correct understanding of the meiotic behavior of chromosomes. This was achieved only gradually, over several decades, with much dispute and confusion along the way. One crucial step in the understanding of meiosis was provided in 1909 by Frans Alfons Janssens who published in La Cellule an article entitled "La théorie de la Chiasmatypie. Nouvelle interprétation des cinèses de maturation," which contains the first description of the chiasma structure. He observed that, of the four chromatids present at the connection sites (chiasmata sites) at diplotene or anaphase of the first meiotic division, two crossed each other and two did not. He therefore postulated that the maternal and paternal chromatids that crossed penetrated the other until they broke and rejoined in maternal and paternal segments new ways; the other two chromatids remained free and thus intact. This allowed him also to propose that the chromatids distributed in the four nuclei issued from the second meiotic division had various combinations of maternal and paternal segments of each chromosome. And conversely, permitted the appreciation that the laws of Mendelian segregation required breakage and joining (crossing over) between homologous non-sister chromatids. Although Janssens's article found a broad appreciative audience and had a large influence on the chromosomal theory at that time, his theory was resisted by both geneticists and cytologists for several decades. This Perspectives aims to highlight the novelty of Janssens's chiasmatype theory by examining the historical background and our actual understanding of meiotic recombination.},
}
@article {pmid22701048,
year = {2012},
author = {Jinks-Robertson, S},
title = {The 2012 Novitski Prize: Dana Carroll.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {191},
number = {2},
pages = {305-306},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.112.138925},
pmid = {22701048},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genetics/*history ; History, 21st Century ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid22701047,
year = {2012},
author = {Connelly, TD and Banerjee, U},
title = {The 2012 Genetics Society of America Elizabeth W. Jones award for excellence in education: David A. Micklos.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {191},
number = {2},
pages = {301-304},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.112.140293},
pmid = {22701047},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genetics/*education/history ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Societies, Scientific ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid22701046,
year = {2012},
author = {Hawley, RS and Wolfner, MF},
title = {The 2012 George W. Beadle Award: Therese Markow.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {191},
number = {2},
pages = {299-300},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.112.139048},
pmid = {22701046},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genetics/*history ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid22701045,
year = {2012},
author = {Bartel, B},
title = {The 2012 Genetics Society of America Medal: Joanne Chory.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {191},
number = {2},
pages = {297-298},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.112.138404},
pmid = {22701045},
issn = {1943-2631},
mesh = {Animals ; *Awards and Prizes ; Genetics/*history ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Societies, Scientific ; United States ; },
}
@article {pmid22701044,
year = {2012},
author = {Wolfner, MF and Schedl, T},
title = {The 2012 Thomas Hunt Morgan medal: Kathryn V. Anderson.},
journal = {Genetics},
volume = {191},
number = {2},
pages = {293-295},
doi = {10.1534/genetics.112.139030},
pmid = {22701044},
issn = {1943-2631},
support = {R01 GM085150/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States ; },
mesh = {*Awards and Prizes ; Genetics/*history ; History, 21st Century ; Societies, Scientific ; United States ; },
abstract = {The Genetics Society of America annually honors members who have made outstanding contributions to genetics. The Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal recognizes a lifetime contribution to the science of genetics. The Genetics Society of America Medal recognizes particularly outstanding contributions to the science of genetics over the past 31 years. The George W. Beadle Medal recognizes distinguished service to the field of genetics and the community of geneticists. The Elizabeth W. Jones Award for Excellence in Education recognizes individuals or groups who have had a significant, sustained impact on genetics education at any level, from kindergarten through graduate school and beyond. The Novitski Prize recognizes an extraordinary level of creativity and intellectual ingenuity in solving significant problems in biological research through the application of genetic methods. We are pleased to announce the 2012 awards.},
}
@article {pmid22679791,
year = {2012},
author = {Stroeva, OG},
title = {[Iosif Abramovich Rapoport: to the 100th anniversary of his birth].},
journal = {Genetika},
volume = {48},
number = {3},
pages = {422-429},
pmid = {22679791},
issn = {0016-6758},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Russia ; },
}
@article {pmid22679790,
year = {2012},
author = {Inge-Vechtomov, SG},
title = {[Yurii Aleksandrovich Filipchenko: to the 130th anniversary of his birth].},
journal = {Genetika},
volume = {48},
number = {3},
pages = {412-421},
pmid = {22679790},
issn = {0016-6758},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Russia ; },
}
@article {pmid22674524,
year = {2012},
author = {Wahlsten, D},
title = {The hunt for gene effects pertinent to behavioral traits and psychiatric disorders: from mouse to human.},
journal = {Developmental psychobiology},
volume = {54},
number = {5},
pages = {475-492},
doi = {10.1002/dev.21043},
pmid = {22674524},
issn = {1098-2302},
mesh = {Animals ; Autistic Disorder/*genetics ; *Disease Models, Animal ; *Genetics, Behavioral/history ; Genome-Wide Association Study ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Intelligence/*genetics ; Mental Disorders/diagnosis/*genetics ; Mice ; Mice, Inbred Strains/genetics ; Mice, Transgenic/genetics ; Multifactorial Inheritance/*genetics ; Phenotype ; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ; Schizophrenia/*genetics ; },
abstract = {The field of behavioral genetics was reviewed in the classic 1960 text by Fuller and Thompson. Since then, there has been remarkable progress in the genetic analysis of animal behavior. Many molecular genetic methods in common use today were not even anticipated in 1960. Animal models for many human psychiatric disorders have been discovered or created. In human behavior genetics, however, powerful new methods have failed to reveal even one bona fide, replicable gene effect pertinent to the normal range of variation in intelligence and personality. There is no explanatory or predictive value in that genetic information. For several psychiatric disorders, including autism and schizophrenia, many large genetic effects arise from de novo mutations. Genetically, the disorders are heterogeneous; different cases with the same diagnosis have different causes. The promises of the molecular genetic revolution have not been fulfilled in behavioral domains of most interest to human psychology.},
}
@article {pmid22668932,
year = {2012},
author = {Beighton, P and Fieggen, K and Wonkam, A and Ramesar, R and Greenberg, J},
title = {UCT's contribution to medical genetics in Africa - from the past into the future.},
journal = {South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde},
volume = {102},
number = {6},
pages = {446-448},
pmid = {22668932},
issn = {0256-9574},
mesh = {Genetic Testing ; Genetics, Medical/education/*history ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Humans ; Schools, Medical ; South Africa ; Universities/*history ; },
abstract = {The Division of Human Genetics (DHG), Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town (UCT) - established in 1972 - recently celebrated its 40th anniversary. We review its history, current status and future objectives. Dr Stuart Saunders, former Professor of Medicine and Vice-Chancellor of UCT, played a pivotal role in initiating the DHG. Dr Peter Beighton served as Professor of Human Genetics from 1972 to 1999. In this period, the initial focus was on medical genetics and the development of cytogenetic, biochemical and molecular laboratories, with the help of Prof Jacquie Greenberg. Fourteen clinical and scientific DHG members obtained doctorates; of these, 8 achieved full professorial status. Current Head of the Department, Prof Raj Ramesar, succeeded to the Chair in 1999. Expansion of the molecular laboratories followed. The DHG now has comprehensive programmes for postgraduate scientific training, research and service. Publications during the lifetime of the DHG include more than 540 articles in peer-reviewed medical, genetic and scientific journals, 20 books and contributions to over 40 chapters/editorials in scientific and medical genetic books.},
}
@article {pmid22662335,
year = {2012},
author = {},
title = {Renato Dulbecco:a Renaissance scientist.},
journal = {Cell},
volume = {149},
number = {1},
pages = {9-10},
pmid = {22662335},
issn = {1097-4172},
mesh = {Genetics/*history ; Genome, Human ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Italy ; Neoplasms/*genetics/*history ; Oncogenic Viruses/physiology ; },
}
@article {pmid22657391,
year = {2012},
author = {Olson, MV},
title = {Human genetic individuality.},
journal = {Annual review of genomics and human genetics},
volume = {13},
number = {},
pages = {1-27},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-genom-090711-163825},
pmid = {22657391},
issn = {1545-293X},
mesh = {Animals ; Evolution, Molecular ; *Genetic Variation ; Genetics, Medical/history ; Genome, Human ; Haplotypes ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Models, Genetic ; Mutation ; Selection, Genetic ; Sequence Analysis, DNA ; },
abstract = {The central preoccupation of human genetics is an effort to understand the genotypic basis of human phenotypic diversity. Although recent progress in identifying the genes that, when mutated, underlie major genetic diseases has been rapid, knowledge of the genetic influences on the vast range of variable, and at least partially heritable, traits that constitute the "normal" range of human phenotypic variation lags. Spectacular advances in our knowledge of human genetic variation have laid the groundwork for a synthesis of insights from medical genetics, population genetics, molecular evolution, and the study of human origins that places basic constraints on models of human genetic individuality. Balancing selection, local adaptation, mutation-selection balance, and founder effects have all extensively shaped contemporary genetic variation. Long-term-balancing selection appears largely to reflect the consequences of host-pathogen arms races. Local adaptation has been widespread-and involved responses to a plethora of selective pressures, some identifiable but most unknown. However, it appears to be a combination of mutation-selection balance and founder effects that largely accounts for genetic individuality. If true, this inference has major implications for future research programs in human genetics.},
}
@article {pmid22651686,
year = {2012},
author = {Wang, TL and